The Lonely War
Now Available at
Amazon.com
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The
key issue keeping the
U.S.
armed forces from going beyond Don't Ask Don't Tell to give gay
servicemen equal rights is a blind fear of love relationships forming,
not between enlisted soldiers but between officers and soldiers, which
would undermine the chain of command. The Lonely War tackles this
topic head on. Set in WWII, it tells the story of an enlisted sailor who
falls in love with his executive officer. When the crew of the USS Pilgrim
become POWs in Changi, a notoriously brutal prison camp, this sailor is
elevated though hardship and love to discover his inner resources and
extraordinary courage, allowing him to sacrifice himself to save the
life of his beloved.
Like
most war novels, The Lonely War envelops all that is unique to
war, the horror of battle, overcoming fear, the cruelty of soldiers, the
loyalty and camaraderie of men caught in a desperate situation. Yet, it
stands alone in two important ways. First, it is a passionate story
written about a tender love developing between an officer and an
enlisted man, revealing a rare and dignified portrait of a couple
struggling to satisfy desire within the confines of the military code of
conduct. Even more importantly however, it describes the heart-wrenching
measures of how much one man will sacrifice to save the life and
reputation of the man he loves.
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