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LANCE GARLAND
Author
Second-Class Sailors

Adult; General Fiction (including literary and historical); (Market)

After the terrorist attacks of 9/11, Cash joins the Navy to become a US Navy SEAL. During training he meets Danny Stone, and they embark on an epic odyssey across the globe. In Thailand, Danny is raped by a fellow shipmate, and makes Cash swear to never tell anyone. Torn between loyalty to Danny and a blind quest for justice, Cash ultimately testifies and becomes the key witness in the criminal trial of the accused. During the journey to the Court Martial, Cash and Danny's sexualities become a matter of personal discovery, as well as public knowledge used as evidence to invalidate their testimonies and service to their country, placing them in direct conflict with the court, as well as the entire US military. 

Told through shifting narratives between men and the sea, across continents and perspectives, Second-Class Sailors is about two men’s struggle to pay the price of truth, and the courage it takes to stand against unbeatable odds, and to overcome them.

Reviews
Kirkus Reviews

A crime novel about the aftermath of a brutal act that examines sexuality’s uneasy place within the strictures of military life.

Garland’s debut begins with a grim act of ferocious violence as U.S. Navy sailor Danny Stone, nearly catatonic from a night of hard drinking, is raped by his colleague. He’s reluctant to pursue charges against his aggressor, however, as he’s hobbled by the shame of his victimization, conflicted about his own sexuality, and afraid to openly state his sexual orientation in an environment that essentially criminalizes same-sex love. His best friend and fellow sailor, Cash Mulroney, knows about the crime and gives testimony regarding it. A tender romance between Cash and Danny slowly blooms. The relationship, which unfurls slowly, is often captured in poetic language: “In the darkness that is now our haven we sit like statues against time. No longer alone, we are capable of anything; the pain, the misery, the damnation, all fall like distant stones to the far reaches below our senses.” However, its discovery threatens to end Cash’s career in the Navy with a dishonorable discharge. The narrative perspective often shifts among multiple characters, giving readers a fuller vision of the drama’s overall emotional stakes. Sometimes Cash provides the narrative perspective; at other times, Danny and occasionally Dorothy Paige, the lead investigator of the rape, are the primary storytellers. The story also serves as a sociological study of the possibility of tolerance in an institution that aspires to govern every aspect of its members’ private lives. The author began writing this book while he was the subject of naval court-martial proceedings himself, but despite the book’s indictment of the military’s stance on homosexuality, it never devolves into a facile rejection of military life. In fact, it presents Cash’s commanding officer as a model combination of military toughness and tolerance. The cinematic courtroom drama, meanwhile, keeps the pace quick and tense.

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