The Hunting Trip
A Novel of Love and War
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
October 15, 2015
Butterworth drops his W.E.B. Griffin nom de plume and shifts from spy/soldier/police derring-do to produce a romantic adventure novel fueled by sly, sometimes arch, humor. Two narrative threads follow Philip Wallingford Williams III, a rich boy expelled from more than one of the right prep schools. In the first, World War II has just ended, and young Phil decides to forge a birth certificate and join the military. He takes "to the Army like a duckling to water," and Butterworth's tale becomes a Forrest Gump-like story of right place, right time. Names are dropped--Schwarzkopf, Colby--as Phil joins a military intelligence detachment in occupied Berlin. Soon he's working for the German-American Gospel Tract Foundation, a CIA cover that unearths Russian spies like beautiful Legs Benidik. Berlin characters include ring-knockers, ticket punchers, hard-drinkers, and refugees from mental institutions and Fort Leavenworth prison. A lusty weekend results in Phil's shotgun wedding to Brunhilde Williams, a Viennese ballerina who later earns the sobriquet "AA," the Angry Austrian. Marriage to a foreigner costs Phil his security clearance, so out of the Army he goes, to settle in Muddiebay, Mississippi, and begin a career as a novelist. Surreptitious notes he made of military officers' sexual peccadilloes become the foundations for bestsellers. The second thread, circa 1975, follows successful novelist Phil among Muddiebay's oversexed dilettantes, trust fund babies, and nouveau riche pretenders as they organize a pheasant-hunting trip to Scotland, a beard for adulterous liaisons and aristocratic hobnobbing. Throughout there's bed-hopping; arch, referential, smug, sometimes supercilious humor; some bits of outright funny stuff; "Expletive Deleted!!" employed by the dozens; a quirky homage to the late Tom Clancy; and some lamentable anachronisms--but Phil finds true love. Butterworth's good-natured buffoonery and hyperbole work far better than Butterworth-as-Griffin adding repartee to Hazardous Duty (2014).
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December 1, 2015
Writing as W. E. B. Griffin, the author has penned numerous manly military novels. This one, published under his own name, is something different. It's not officially autobiographicalButterworth tells us the story is fictionalbut its central character, Philip W. Williams III, bears an uncanny resemblance to his creator. Like Butterworth, Philip enlisted in the U.S. Army at a young age, went into counterintelligence, married a ballet dancer, and became a best-selling novelist. Readers familiar with M*A*S*H (or the numerous sequels, which author Richard Hooker cowrote with Butterworth) will recognize the tone here: light, a little goofy, but with some darker, more serious undertones. The writing is perhaps a bit too precious in placesButterworth uses the phrase EXPLETIVE DELETED!! to replace profanitybut the story, which takes Philip from the mid-1940s to the mid-1970s, is quite entertaining. It might come as a surprise to many W. E. B. Griffin fans that Butterworth's literary output is actually quite varied: under different names, he's written mysteries, YA fiction, romance, and nonfiction. This thinly veiled roman a clef extends his range still further and will attract fans of military-based fiction.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)
August 1, 2015
Butterworth, aka W.E.B. Griffin, tells the story of Philip W. Williams III, who's expelled from boarding school for a prank but eventually becomes a special agent of the U.S. Army Counterintelligence Corps and best-selling novelist (oh?) who finds his true love on a hunting trip.
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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