Find out the latest indie author news. For FREE.

ADVERTISEMENT

Greenleaf Book Group
Service Provider
Charlotte's War
This epic novel follows one extraordinary American woman as she grieves and triumphs through the horrific realities of three wars that threaten the men she loves. Charlotte Shipwright is in the fight of her life to save her firstborn son from facing a truth she knows all too well—the dreadful impact of war. First, she watched her own brother suffer the destructive consequences of youthful bravado in WWII. Then, she waved goodbye to her husband, a decorated hero, who sailed into harm’s way a second time in the Korean conflict. Now, with her son headed to Vietnam, Charlotte is using all the arrows in her quiver to stop the conflict. As Charlotte weaves through major world events, her remarkable will and intelligence position her to offer key insights to leaders negotiating peace in Vietnam. After being raised in China by missionary parents, Charlotte completed her studies at Radcliffe and Harvard and received a Berkeley PhD in anthropology, giving her unique expertise to persuade the renowned decision makers she encounters. The formidable connections Charlotte forges over the years—including visionaries such as JFK, two U.S. Secretaries of State, and even Ho Chi Minh—culminate in a surprising and captivating convergence of personalities, power, and politics.
Reviews
“We Americans are handicapped by our own culture when it comes to negotiating inventively,” writes Charlotte, the anthropologist protagonist of Graham’s sweeping, incisive novel, a book that charts both her life as a pioneering thinker, writer, and advocate for peace but also the continual global conflicts of her era, that Cold War stretch of twentieth century between the second World War and the abattoir of Vietnam. Charlotte, like Graham, believes in peace, negotiation, and understanding—as a student at Harvard she issues a “fusillade” against Henry Kissinger, a young colleague and sparring partner, against the idea of the great powers “drawing lines on maps that made no sense with respect to cultural differences.”

Those words haunt a novel that brings spirited, illuminating context to decades of conflict. Graham emphasizes, through the experiences of Charlotte and also fascinating chapters digging into the life experiences and political development of both Kissinger and Ho Chi Minh, how the roots of the Vietnam War were nurtured long before the bumptious 1960s, and how thinking like Charlotte’s—and possibly her doomed acquaintance Jack Kennedy—might have saved innumerable lives. The novel often eschews traditional scene-driven drama for summarizing, explanatory, and epistolary modes, though this approach is smartly controlled, never diminishing narrative momentum. He’s especially good at connecting culture, mass media, and ideology.

That’s because the suspense of Charlotte’s War is in how the globe itself will get swept up in the minds and ideologies Graham investigates. Still, his heroine is arresting, her mind a pleasure to spend time with, with deep, sometimes surprising personal connections to wars and men ravaging the globe, as well as thinkers you might not expect, like Ursula Le Guin. Graham writes movingly—and with a refreshing lightness of touch—about Charlotte’s personal life: dating in college, sorting out marital responsibilities, the challenges of being a career-minded woman in mid-century America. Her impulse toward finding solutions through our common humanity rather than a Kissningerian obsession with power burns bright.

Takeaway: This novel illuminates mid-century U.S. foreign conflicts through the eyes of a humane heroine.

Great for fans of: Elizabeth Spencer’s No Place for an Angel, Bob Shocochis’s The Woman Who Lost Her Soul.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

ADVERTISEMENT

Loading...