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One was a soldier  Cover Image Book Book

One was a soldier

Record details

  • ISBN: 0312334893
  • ISBN: 9780312334895
  • Physical Description: vii, 327 p. ; 25 cm.
    print
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Minotaur Books, 2011.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"A Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alstyne mystery"--Jacket.
"A Thomas Dunne book."
Summary, etc.: At the Millers Kill Community Center, five veterans gather to work on adjusting to life after war. The Reverend Clare Fergusson has returned from Iraq with a head full of bad memories she's using alcohol to wipe out. Dr. George Stillman is denying that the head wound he received has left him with something worse than simple migraines. Officer Eric McCrea is battling to keep his constant rage from affecting his life as a cop, and as a father. High school track star Will Ellis is looking for some reason to keep on living after losing both legs to an IED. And Tally McNabb has brought home a fatal secret. Police Chief Russ Van Alstyne just wants Clare to settle down and get married to him. But when he rules Tally McNabbs death a suicide, Clare sides with the other vets against him. Russ and Clares unorthodox investigation will uncover a trail of deceit that runs from their tiny Adirondack town to the upper ranks of the Army, and from the waters of the Millers Kill to the unforgiving streets of Baghdad.
Subject: Iraq War, 2003-2011 Veterans Fiction
Veterans Crimes against Fiction
Fergusson, Clare (Fictitious character) Fiction
Van Alstyne, Russ (Fictitious character) Fiction
Women clergy Fiction
Police chiefs Fiction
Murder Investigation Fiction
City and town life New York (State) Adirondack Mountains Fiction
Genre: Mystery fiction.
Detective and mystery stories.
Mystery fiction.

Available copies

  • 19 of 19 copies available at Bibliomation.
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Ridgefield Library. (Show)

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 19 total copies.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Ridgefield Library M SPENCER-FLEMING RCFRVA 7 (Text) 34010122558918 Adult Mystery Available -
Babcock Library - Ashford M SPE (Text) 3311000077737$ Adult Mystery Available -
Bethel Public Library MYS SPENCERFLEMING (Text) 34030105806167 Adult Mystery Available -
Booth & Dimock Library - Coventry A M SPE (Text) 33260000084369 Adult Mystery Available -
Easton Public Library MYS SPENCER-FLEMING (Text) 37777004038816 Adult Mystery Available -
Edith Wheeler Memorial Library - Monroe FIC SPENCER-FLEMING,J (Text) 34026139770551 Adult Fiction Available -
Kent Library Association - Kent MYS SPE (Text) 33410116703523 Adult Mystery Available -
Killingly Library F Spe (Text) 34040121632174 Adult Mystery Available -
Mark Twain Library Association - Redding MYS Spe (Text) 33620116219813 Adult Mystery Available -
Milford Public Library SPENCER-FLEMING Julia (Text) 34013076909061 Adult Fiction Available -

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Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780312334895
One Was a Soldier
One Was a Soldier
by Spencer-Fleming, Julia
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Kirkus Review

One Was a Soldier

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The good news is that Rev. Clare Fergusson has come home from her Mideastern deployment as Maj. Fergusson to a marriage proposal from Millers Kill Police Chief Russ Van Alstyne. But that's about the extent of the good news.Despite its high murder rate (I Shall Not Want, 2008, etc.), Millers Kill, NY, is a small town, so it's not surprising that everyone in the therapy group clinician Sarah Dowling runs for returning veterans knows everyone else. But Clare Fergusson, orthopedist Trip Stillman, double amputee Will Ellis, bookkeeper Tally McNabb and MP Eric McCrea, who's returning to the civilian police force, can't imagine how closely and painfully their lives will become tangled over the coming months. The news that Trip's sister Ellen Bain, who works at millionaire John Opperman's Algonquin Waters Resort, has been killed in a car accident that also provokes the premature birth of Chris Stoner's baby Zachary while his father's between tours of Afghanistan, is only the curtain-raiser to a darker immersion in massive fraud, corruption and murder. It's obvious to everyone but Clare and Russ who the guilty party is. The author is less interested in fixing individual guilt, however, than in exploring the inescapable legacies of soldiers come homeincluding a crushing burden of imagined, and unimaginable, guilt.Spencer-Fleming's most ambitious book yetthink The Best Years of Our Lives with corpsescan't quite live up to its lofty goals. But fans will continue to be impressed by her resourceful determination never to tell the same story twice.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - New York Times Review for ISBN Number 9780312334895
One Was a Soldier
One Was a Soldier
by Spencer-Fleming, Julia
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New York Times Review

One Was a Soldier

New York Times


April 24, 2011

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company

War - especially the politics of war - changes everything in a historical mystery. Ever since Anne Perry took her stalwart working-class hero, Thomas Pitt, off the streets of Victorian London and elevated this former police detective to a post in secret intelligence, the books in this series have become more overtly political, making them more exciting, but, frankly, not as much fun. Pitt's well-born wife and canny sleuthing partner, Charlotte, says as much in TREASON AT LISSON GROVE (Ballantine, $26). Thinking back to the days when her husband still needed her help to negotiate the closed ranks of high society, Charlotte acknowledges the danger involved in those early cases of scandalous domestic passions and deplorable social evils. "But she had loved the adventure of both heart and mind, the cause for which to fight." Charlotte gets to taste danger again when she skips off to Dublin to infiltrate a group of Irish nationalists who may have had a hand in a plot against Victor Narraway, Pitt's boss at the Special Branch before he was ousted by a personal enemy and possible traitor. Posing as Narraway's sister, Charlotte blooms in the lively society of the Irish capital, stimulated by "the vitality in the air, the energy of emotion in the gestures." And Narraway's forbidden love for her intensifies the thrill of this daring escapade. Pitt, meanwhile, has been lured away to France in pursuit of a fugitive anarchist, a ploy that keeps him from helping Narraway and distracts him from a more immediate threat at home. A stern but compassionate man, Pitt is sensitive to the widespread social injustice behind the cries for revolution heard throughout Europe in 1895. But bringing down the English government is something else again, and when Pitt swings into action the narrative accelerates accordingly. Perry writes with great urgency about the desperate actions of people who believe they're fighting for a just cause. But, as Narraway points out, political anarchists aren't social reformers. "They're fanatic," he observes. "It's the new religion, with all the fire and evangelism of a holy cause." Anyone can pick out these zealots in a mob on the waterfront. Perry's skill lies in her ability to place one of them across the table from you at a tea party, graciously handing you a plate of cucumber sandwiches. World War II has been over for almost 10 years in FIELD GRAY (Marian Wood/Putnam, $26.95), the darkest and most disturbing of Philip Kerr's novels featuring Bernie Gunther, the former German police officer and wiseguy private eye of his Berlin Noir trilogy. Bernie is living the lazy life in Cuba in 1954, doing this and that for the gangster Meyer Lansky, when a chance run-in with the American Navy sends him first to GuantƃĀ”namo and then to Landsberg Prison in West Germany, where he's roughed up by American interrogators and grilled about his wartime relationship with Erich Mielke, soon to take charge of the East German Stasi. Anxious to distance himself from the war criminals stockpiled at Landsberg, Bernie takes his interrogators back to 1930, when a humanitarian impulse led him to save Mielke's life in Berlin. But the young Communist repaid the favor by killing two policemen, sending Bernie on a vengeance mission that lasted throughout the war. Thanks to his examiners, Bernie is forced to reflect on horrific events that Kerr seems to have culled from historical sources. But Bernie's cynical, completely twisted idea of payback is brilliantly in character. Although he never served in any man's army during World War II, John Russell has always been in the thick of things in David Downing's powerful historical novels set largely in Berlin. POTSDAM STATION (Soho Crime, $25) finds this well-traveled Anglo-American journalist in Moscow in the spring of 1945, angling for a way to get back into Berlin, where his German girlfriend is still trapped, before the Reich falls and the Red Army starts exacting its revenge on the surviving populace - starting with the women. Russell gets his pass; but it's not free. He must guide an expedition to Berlin on a secret hunt for documents from the German atomic research program. Downing provides no platform for debate in this unsentimental novel, leaving his hero to ponder the ethics of his pragmatic choices while surveying the groundlevel horrors to be seen in Berlin. The assaults on the ear are no less shocking, from the screams of women in the night to the appalling silence at the end of it all. Amateur detectives don't usually interrupt their duties to go tearing off to war. But Clare Fergusson, the Episcopal priest in Julia Spencer-Fleming's unconventional mysteries, has always been a genre rule breaker, so it makes sense that this former military pilot would sign up for another tour of duty in Iraq. Clare is already back in her Adirondack parish in ONE WAS A SOLDIER (Minotaur/Thomas Dunne, $24.99), but like a lot of returning vets she finds herself with a combat-related problem, a dependence on pills and liquor. Turning to a support group, she meets other troubled soldiers, including one who commits suicide. At least, that's what Clare's fiancƃĀ©, the chief of police, calls it, but Clare has her doubts. Spencer-Fleming knows her craft, which lends authority to the subsequent investigation. But it's character that really counts here, and nothing becomes Clare's character more than her deepening sensitivity to the suffering of her fellow soldiers. Anne Perry's workingclass hero, Thomas Pitt, now has a post in secret intelligence in Victorian London.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9780312334895
One Was a Soldier
One Was a Soldier
by Spencer-Fleming, Julia
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Publishers Weekly Review

One Was a Soldier

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Adjusting to civilian life after a tour in Iraq proves difficult for Rev. Clare Fergusson in Spencer-Fleming's resonant and timely seventh mystery featuring Clare and her not-so-secret lover, police chief Russ Van Alstyne (after 2008's I Shall Not Want). On returning to Millers Kill, N.Y., Clare jumps right back into her duties as priest of St. Alban's Episcopalian Church. But her 18 months flying helicopters in Iraq aren't entirely in the past: she's drinking more and relying on a mix of leftover pills from her Army medical kit. Along with several other returning service members, Clare joins a community support group for veterans. When a member of the group, Tally McNab, apparently shoots herself in the mouth and falls dead into her swimming pool, Clare spearheads an investigation, hounding Russ to consider homicide. Clare and Russ's relationship deepens, while the focus on the struggles of veterans supplies another strong emotional thread. Author tour; 75,000 first printing. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9780312334895
One Was a Soldier
One Was a Soldier
by Spencer-Fleming, Julia
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Library Journal Review

One Was a Soldier

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Clare Fergusson comes home from Iraq to Millers Kill, NY, a damaged version of herself. She must now reconcile her combat experiences with her other job as an Episcopal priest. When a fellow veteran in her therapy group is killed and the death ruled a suicide, Clare sets off to uncover the truth. In her latest mystery (after I Shall Not Want), the award-winning Spencer-Fleming calls attention to the stress, nightmares, anger, and guilt many military personnel experience on their return to civilian life. VERDICT In the hands of a lesser writer, this novel would not fly, but Spencer-Fleming carries it off and concludes with a believable resolution. As always, there is a cliffhanger ending for Clare. Outstanding. [75,000-copy first printing; see Prepub Mystery, LJ 7/10.] (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 9780312334895
One Was a Soldier
One Was a Soldier
by Spencer-Fleming, Julia
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BookList Review

One Was a Soldier

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* Reunited after 18 months, Episcopalian priest Clare Fergusson and police chief Russ Van Alstyne seek a future together. But Clare's extended tour as a National Guard helicopter pilot in Iraq has left her needing booze and pills to get through the night, a dependence she's unable to admit even in her counseling group of Iraq veterans that includes a teenage double amputee, a cop with anger issues, a doctor with short-term memory loss, and a bookkeeper, Tally McNabb, who's soon found shot to death. Unable to accept Tally's death as a suicide even after she's found to have engineered a million-dollar theft from the army, Clare prods the group to a much bigger discovery. As in her previous novel, I Shall Not Want (2008), Spencer-Fleming explores a serious societal issue the reentry problems of soldiers home from combat that extends even to small-town Millers Kill, New York, while concocting an absolutely irresistible combination of crime fiction and romance. Despite some potentially confusing play with chronology early on, this is a surefire winner, taking the linchpin Fergusson-Van Alstyne relationship to a new level, probing the personal lives of other members of the town's police department, and personalizing the toll taken by war. Spencer-Fleming's fans who have been waiting anxiously for her latest won't be disappointed; this series, as intelligent as it is enthralling, just keeps getting better.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2010 Booklist

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