A century-old soldier's diary wasn't meant for him, but he found himself in the story.
An art historian living a quiet life in Southern California never expects his late mother's antique collection to contain a mystery that will upend him. Yet hidden among her rare books is a meticulously handwritten World War I diary, signed only with the initials "J.F.W." The coincidence is unsettling. The contents are even more so.
The diary's author-a British cavalryman turned infantry officer-records his journey from the Devon coast to the Western Front and onward to Mesopotamia, where global powers clash over railways, oil routes, and control of the Suez Canal. His prose is disciplined, factual, and restrained. But what he does not say is as provocative as what he reveals. Why did he reenlist after injury? What compelled him to leave home twice? And why conceal his full name?
Determined to uncover the soldier's identity, Jonathan Frederick Worthington plunges into military archives, geopolitical history, and the shadowy politics behind the Berlin-to-Baghdad Railway. With the help of an enigmatic librarian whose intellect challenges and unsettles him, he reconstructs the broader forces that shaped the Great War-imperial ambition, Russian expansionism, Ottoman alliances, and the fragile infrastructure of empire.
But as Jonathan reads deeper, the past begins to answer back. In imagined counterpoint, the soldier defends his choices, confronts personal betrayal, and reveals a man far more complex than the official record suggests. The search for historical truth becomes inseparable from Jonathan's own reckoning with grief, identity, and his fear of intimacy. What begins as an academic curiosity evolves into a confrontation with how stories are shaped-by nations, by families, and by the silences we inherit.
Blending literary historical fiction, academic intrigue, metafictional dialogue, and geopolitical suspense, this novel explores the human cost behind the Eastern Question and the strategic struggle for Basra, Baghdad, and beyond. For readers who love intelligent historical narratives, layered character studies, and stories where past and present collide, this is a powerful meditation on memory, empire, and the fragile act of interpretation.
History is never settled. It waits for someone brave enough to read between the lines.
For fans of Birdsong, The Alice Network, and Letters From Skye, Jonathan's Journal is a lyrical journey into forgotten wartime frontiers, intimate secrets, and the quiet heroism of personal discovery.