Those of you who know me know I love historical fiction and know that my favorite author is this genre is Genevieve Graham who always tells a bit of Canadian history in all of her incredible novels. Well she's got a brand new WWII era novel coming out in March of 2021 and I'm excited to share with all my friends her US cover reveal and an excerpt. I can't wait to get my hands on this book and I know many of you feel the same way.
Enjoy!
Read an excerpt:
On Christmas morning, the remaining ragtag members of
Canada's Royal Rifles and Winnipeg Grenadiers, known as C Force emerged from
the mountains, worn threadbare after two weeks of fighting the relentless
Japanese offensive. Without food or water, they'd climbed impossibly steep
slopes to fire down on the enemy, then stooped under thick, tropical
undergrowth the next, laden with weapons, dwindling ammunition and what
wounded they could carry.
The attack on Pearl Harbour felt like a year ago, not
18 days. Since then, the Allied forces had lost the Hong Kong mainland to
Japan and been pushed to this last stronghold, at the south end of Hong Kong
Island: Stanley Fort.
Max, David, and Arnie collapsed with exhaustion, lying flat
on the cement floor of the fort.
"Think we'll ever get home?" David asked.
Max rolled his head to look at his brother-in-law's profile.
Like the rest of them, David was streaked with dirt; some was clumped into his
beard. No one had shaved in a week. Hell, no one had taken off their boots.
Max started to answer, but David was already asleep.
An hour later, Sergeant Cox emerged from a meeting, and Max
noted the tight set of his jaw.
"At 1:00 p.m., we will retake Stanley Village," he
said, pointing to a building on his map, set behind the village graveyard.
"In broad daylight, sir?" Max asked, his voice
hoarse.
Cox reluctantly met their bloodshot eyes. "Here's the
choice, fellas. We attack or wait here like lame ducks." He lifted his
chin. "Except it's no choice at all. We're Canadians. We don't give up.
I'm not gonna lie. The truth is, they don't expect many of us to return."
Arnie lay on the ground nearby, listening. At that, he
rolled onto one elbow. "Sir, that's goddamn pleasant news on Christmas
morning."
Max smiled while the entire unit applauded. Leave it to
Arnie to hang onto his sense of humour to the last. But dread rolled through
Max at Cox's cold, hard facts.
"Whoever makes it out of this has to tell the
wives," David muttered, blinking hard. "I'm not sure which would be
worse."
I'll keep him safe, Max had promised his sister Hannah,
long ago in a letter. Was there anything he could do to keep that promise?
"We'll get out of this," Max tried to say, but the
words stuck in his throat, burning there.
The next hour or so was spent in near silence. No one
complained, and no one begged to be excused from the battle. They were in this
together, and Max felt their resolve just as he felt his own. He cleaned his
weapons, stocked up on grenades, then, resigned to his fate, fell asleep.
When the time came, they followed Cox, staying low and
ducking into a ditch across the road from the village cemetery. Max noted the
Japanese spread all over it, surrounded by superior weapons and what looked
like limitless ammunition. Beyond them stood the target. He glanced behind him
at David and Arnie, shoving clips into their rifles. That done, they looked to
him, and a terrible sadness stretched between the three friends. What
would be left of them when this was all over?
"Fix bayonets," Cox called.
All at once they were charging, screaming like banshees,
firing their precious ammunition. When they got closer, the bayonets came into
play, then Max used his fists, roaring with fury with every punch. Incredibly,
the Japanese started to fall back and flee toward the row of houses.
"Go after them!" Cox shouted.
And then Max was running with the rest of them, tossing
grenades into the occupied houses, feeling the whoosh of heat burn his skin as
they exploded.
"We're doing it!" David yelled.
Ahead of them, the targeted houses looked wide open, and
Max, David, and Arnie careened through the door of the nearest one. Through the
smoke, Max spotted enemy soldiers scrambling out of a back window. He gave
chase, then froze when he spotted movement to his left.
"Grenade!" he screamed, wheeling back toward the
entrance. The three of them tumbled out the door, deafened by the explosion,
then watched their comrades pour out of another house just before it exploded.
Those men staggered to their feet, but the Japanese were on them, cutting them
down. The enemy had regrouped, and they were a furious hive of deadly hornets.
"Retreat! Retreat!"
"Come on!" Max yelled. "We're getting out of
here now!"
He could feel the bullets whizzing past, so close, so very
close, as they ran. Then David turned. Suddenly his eyes flew open in an almost
comical expression of disbelief, and he dropped like a stone.
Max fell beside him, screaming David's name, pumping his
chest and pleading for him to Breathe! Breathe! despite the savage
hole shot between his eyes. Seconds later Arnie squatted beside them.
"We gotta go!" he sobbed. "Come on,
Max!"
But Max stared at David's body, unable to move. He couldn't
leave him there. With all his strength, he threw David over his shoulder and
started to run, feeling the dear weight of his brother-in-law jarring against
him every step of the way. Then Max jerked, his leg giving way when a bullet
struck him, and both he and David tumbled across the field, his gun rolling off
on its own.
Arnie looked back, but Max shook his head. "Run, Arnie!
Keep running!" He dug his fingertips into the dirt, dragging his body
toward David's, then froze when a black leather boot appeared in his vision. He
looked up, straight into the barrel of a Japanese gun.
The soldier looked so young, Max thought. Barely old enough
to be shaving.
Max dropped his face to the dirt, his empty hands held out
in surrender. I'm so sorry, Hannah. I'm so sorry, Hannah. But there
was no use in pleading. There was no escape.
Genevieve Graham is the #1 bestselling author of The Forgotten Home Child, Tides of Honour, Promises to Keep, Come from Away, and At the Mountain’s Edge. She is passionate about breathing life back into Canadian history through tales of love and adventure. She lives near Halifax, Nova Scotia. Visit her at GenevieveGraham.com or on Twitter and Instagram @GenGrahamAuthor.
Love her books, too! The cover looks like it has it's own story to tell.
ReplyDeleteI know right the US cover is so beautiful! xo
DeleteIsn't it lovely. I look forward to it. I am hoping they bring it to audio.
ReplyDeleteme too
DeleteI saw that she had this book coming out in my Goodreads feed. She certainly does write an amazing historical story. I think this time round my vote goes to the USA cover.
ReplyDeleteyes mine too Kathryn
DeleteOhh, I def read this
ReplyDeleteyou'd love her
DeleteI prefer the US cover. It is more appealing.
ReplyDeletetrue
Delete