An Inspector Calls: and Other Plays
Book
Previously published as Time and the Conways and Other Plays, J.B. Priestley's An Inspector Calls...
Stone of Tears (Sword of Truth, #2)
Book
In Wizard's First Rule, Richard Cypher's world was turned upside down. Once a simple woods guide,...
The Mersey Road Tunnels: The First Eighty Years in Pictures
Book
The story of the Queensway and Kingsway road tunnels, together known as the Mersey Road Tunnels, is...
The Knights Errant of Anarchy: London and the Italian Anarchist Diaspora (1880-1917)
Book
The political diaspora played a major part in the history of the international anarchist movement:...
Hazel (1853 KP) rated Hearts of Stone in Books
Dec 17, 2018
Simon Scarrow brings to life the horrors of World War II in his latest novel <i>Hearts of Stone</i>. In 2013, Anna Thesskoudiss, a history teacher is contacted by a German research student, Dieter Muller who is interested in talking to her grandmother Eleni. He explains that he is the grandson of Peter Muller who was friends with her grandmother whilst staying on the Greek island of Lefkas until the war made them enemies.
Dieter Muller’s introduction implies that the story is going to be about the relationship between Eleni and Peter, which gets destroyed when Peter returns to the island as an enemy intelligence officer. The blurb for <i>Hearts of Stone</i> also implies this. However, the majority of the book focuses on their friend Andreas’ experience of the Navy and his role in the resistance. Scarrow goes into detail of every dangerous situation Andreas finds himself in, but this is not what the reader was expecting to learn about. Eventually the final chapters turn to Peter’s role in the war and the reason Eleni and he could no longer consider themselves friends.
Despite being full of action and war horrors, it gets a little boring reading about Andreas’ life. Although this narrative leads to what happens with Peter, it occasionally felt unnecessary, as it was the final stages that appeared to be the most important.
From an historical point of view it is refreshing to read a war story that is not focused on either Britain or Germany. <i>Hearts of Stone</i> reveals how Greece was affected even though they were not one of the main fighting bodies. It is shocking how many innocent people were killed purely for the Nazi’s to invoke fear in the hopes the natives would submit to their rule.
Hopefully the vast amount of mistakes and grammatical errors would have been corrected before the final – I read an uncorrected proof – publication. Admittedly <i>Hearts of Stone</i> was a bit of a disappointment as it was not exactly what it appeared to be. However it has educational value as well as entertainment for readers who enjoy war stories. Scarrow has also included maps of the Greek island of Lefkas and the Mediterranean during WWII as well as a character list to benefit readers as they take in the story.
Time and Place are Nonsense: The Films of Seijun Suzuki
Book
Japanese film director Seijun Suzuki began his career making increasingly outrageous B movies for...
Winston Churchill: Politics, Strategy and Statecraft
Book
Winston Churchill is a renowned historical figure, whose remarkable political and military career...
Young Emma
Book
At the age of fifty, towards the end of the First World War, W. H. Davies decided that he must...
Bleriot: Flight into the XXth Century
Book
Born into a well-to-do family in the North of France, Louis Bleriot, a young engineer became, at the...