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Paperback Billy Boyle Book

ISBN: 1616953551

ISBN13: 9781616953553

Billy Boyle

(Book #1 in the Billy Boyle World War II Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

What's a twenty-two-year-old Irish American cop who's never been out of Massachusetts before doing at Beardsley Hall, an English country house, having lunch with King Haakon of Norway? Billy Boyle... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

So much fun!

This was a charming book. It had lots of '40s lingo and was all in all a lot of fun. The plot wasn't terribly complex - though there were a few surprises. Mostly it made for a fun read that wouldn't have been nearly as much fun if it weren't for the characters. They were immensely likable I will keep an eye out to read about Billy's other exploits.

WWII action plus mystery...who can ask for more?

I was growing up during the World War II years and this series is a treasure to me. This book is an excellant kickoff for me.Although I read BLOOD ALONE first, I highly recommend reading these in order. The character definitely matures from book to book. The status and relationships with other characters also develop. Also the mood changes, this having the most humor of the three books. Anyway, this book sets up the main character, a distant relative of General Dwight Eisenhower and an Irish-American cop in Boston who's just made detective when the U.S. enters the war. He expects his relationship to Ike to pave his way into a nice cushy and safe staff job in the army, but of course it doesn't turn out that way for him. Instead, he becomes Ike's personal investigator and is assigned to ferret out a spy connected with the Norwegian Government in exile in England. This is an intricate mystery with the war background. The only warning I'll give is that it will hook you and you'll want to read the two sequels as well.

AS GOOD AS IT GETS...

The reason I like James Benn is that he incorporates the best of Alan Furst, Robert Wilson, Philip Kerr and Eric Ambler. If you like 'Film Noir" you'll love 'Book' Noir. Billy Boyle takes place at a time when good and bad were clearly defined, unlike today. The novel's characters relect that trend yet they have the human flaws that are incumbent in all people, but so well described in this work by Mr. Benn. This is a book that is a mystery and really is. The obvious is not so obvious and the surprises come out of left field. I read this in two nights. It would have only taken me one night but I needed to sleep since I had to work the next morning, but you know, I could have skipped work and it would have been worth it.

Welcome To The Big Time

With "Billy Boyle," Benn delivers a memorable character, a great story (all the better for being based on fact) and an interesting new perspective on fighting WWII. It's a terrific read, and I hope we will see more of Billy Boyle in the future.

A soldier-detective learns the lessons of war

Straight out of Officer Candidate School, Lt. Billy Boyle finds himself not in a sheltered stateside billet but in a freezing B-17 on his way to war-torn London, assigned to Hq, European Theater of Operations. How did he get here? As he's arrived at so many other destinations in his young life: through family connections, this one on his mother's side--the Douds. When he arrives, his "Uncle Ike," General Dwight D. Eisenhower, briefs him on his first assignment, to use his skills as a detective in finding a spy who has infiltrated "Operation Juno," an Allied operation centered on Norway. There are things that Billy doesn't know about "Operation Juno," and things that Ike doesn't know about Billy, particularly that Billy passed the detective's exam only with some family help. And Billy himself doesn't know how he's going to pull this off, but he knows his duty when he sees it. And he's been a Boston cop for five years, and has learned a lot about detection from his father, himself a veteran South Boston cop. So Billy begins his investigation, and then there's a murder, and then another death, a heartbreaking one. Billy moves about, from London to the English countryside, and to other military bases, learning all the time--from his associates, from the people he meets along the way, and from his own memories of his father's life and what his father has taught him. Things like "chasing a lie" to find the truth, and looking for remorse when it should be found, but isn't always. The writing here is absolutely excellent, skillfully interweaving Billy's search for a murderer and for justice with the lessons that he's been learning all his life, now concentrated in a war-time environment. The characters are beautifully realized, and all have something to teach Billy. Eisenhower appears only a few times, but each time he introduces a theme of the novel: family, the inevitability of loss, and the terrible costs of war. And the author shines in his characterization of Billy, who at the start of his tale is simultaneously cocky yet unsure of himself in this brand new milieu; as his investigation continues, he learns the lessons of war, and of family, of true bravery, and of manhood. The various settings are perfectly detailed, whether in bombed-out London, at an English country house, or in a newly-built mess hall in England, so new that the sawdust from its construction still lies in straight lines on the ground nearby. Likewise, dialogue is true to the period, yet never trite. This is a fine book, with an engaging hero. It is suspenseful, often charming, and always thoughtful, right up to its exciting denouement. I'm looking forward to the next one in the series.
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