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The Valley of Bones (A Dance to the Music of Time)

(Book #7 in the A Dance to the Music of Time Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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'He is, as Proust was before him, the great literary chronicler of his culture in his time.' GUARDIAN 'A Dance to the Music of Time' is universally acknowledged as one of the great works of English... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Most of the battalion's officers worked at banks

Nicholas Jenkins is a second lieutenant. He explains to Gwatkin, a fellow officer, that reading even Rudyard Kipling goes with his profession. Gwatkin needs drama in his life. The men move to their new posting secretly. Nick is lucky enough to get a portion of tea given to the group by a farmer, what his Uncle Giles would have termed a sergeat-major's tea. A favorite phrase of Gwatkin is that the fog of war has descended. Returning from a field exercise, Nick and the others discover that Germany has invaded Norway and Denmark. Someone is reading SERVITUDE ET GRANDEUR MILITAIRE by Alfred de Vigny. It seems the poet served for fourteen years as a regular soldier. Moreland, a composer, used to quote Nietzsche saying there was no action without illusion. From the time of his childhood in 1914 Nick remembered his father's batallion marching to Aldershot. Those men wore scarlet and had spiked helmets. Nick is given a lift from Aldershot by Odo Stevens to spend to spend the weekend at the place of his sister-in-law, a former vicarage. He learns that his sister-in-law, Frederica, is to marry Dicky Umfraville. The way Umfraville speaks produces a disquieting impression. Charles Stringham's sister, Flavia, is visiting Frederica. Nick learns that Charles is a private in the Royal Army Ordinance Corps. Robert Tolland, who has maneuvered his way into the officer corps, is to travel to the area of his group with Nick and Odo Stevens in the borrowed motor car. It seems that he does not want to go missing when orders are given because he doesn't want a substitute to take his place. Nick's unit is billeted at Castlemallock. Isobel writes that its history includes Byron and Lady Caroline. Nick learns that most of the battalion's officers work at banks in peacetime and fear a return to boredom after military service ceases. By now it is summer, hot, Churchill is in charge, the Netherlands has been subject to invasion and Dunkirk looms. Some people are stimulated by disaster. In this installment of the series the author moves his groups of people in a satisfying and confusing way copying real life rather in the manner employed by Robert Altman in the making of his films. There is a brilliant portrait of a Stendhalian hero, Rowland Gwatkin.
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