Our site will be undergoing maintenance from 6 a.m. - 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, May 20. During this time, Bookshop, checkout, and other features will be unavailable. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Cookies must be enabled to use this website.
Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Literary
  • Language:English
  • Pages:283
  • eBook ISBN:9780982904367

Love and War

by Linda Hanley Finigan

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview
An Indie Reader Discovery Award finalist, LOVE AND WAR spans the 1960s through the lives of Molly Drayton, an antiwar activist whose father becomes under secretary of Defense, and Jack Masterson, a Marine suffering the scars of Vietnam. Set against the backdrop of that tumultuous decade—the music, the protests, the culture, the unraveling— LOVE AND WAR is a coming of age novel, a love story and a war story, a road trip across America in a troubled time whose politics and passions continue to haunt our own. In a four star review, Indie Reader says: "(LOVE AND WAR).. reads like a hybrid of "The Things They Carried", and director Julie Taymor's visual extravaganza "Across the Universe." The Durham Herald writes: "If you lived through that decade, or are just fascinated with the historical period, …Linda Hanley Finigan's novel LOVE AND WAR offers a ride you will willingly want to take from the opening pages." Molly Drayton, the idealistic daughter of Republican parents, is twelve years old when she tells JFK that she loves him at a New York campaign stop in 1960. Across the country, thirteen year-old Jack Masterson and his widowed mother are leaving Ohio for a new life in California. In alternating chapters, Molly and Jack journey toward their eventual meeting in 1970, a parallel narrative through the counter-culture wars at home and the battlefields of Vietnam. When a chance meeting brings them together, they embark on a cross-country road trip and a volatile love affair, both fleeing the dissolution of the world they knew. Jack is a shattered veteran of the war. Estranged from her powerful family, disillusioned by the violent collapse of the protest movement, Molly hopes her love will free them. "Finigan's light touch saves the book from becoming simply yet another book about the 1960s," Indie Reader's reviewer writes. "…LOVE AND WAR is a worthy choice for anyone who understands how loving someone can be both a miraculous and painful choice."
Description
An Indie Reader Discovery Award finalist, LOVE AND WAR, spans the 1960s through the lives of two unforgettable characters: Molly Drayton, an antiwar activist whose father becomes under secretary of Defense, and Jack Masterson, a Marine suffering the scars of Vietnam. Set against the backdrop of that tumultuous decade—the music, the protests, the culture, the unraveling— LOVE AND WAR is a coming of age novel, a love story and a war story, a road trip across America in a troubled time whose politics and passions continue to haunt our own. In a four star review, Indie Reader says: "(LOVE AND WAR).. reads like a hybrid of "The Things They Carried", and director Julie Taymor's visual extravaganza "Across the Universe." The Durham Herald writes: "If you lived through that decade, or are just fascinated with the historical period, …Linda Hanley Finigan's novel LOVE AND WAR offers a ride you will willingly want to take from the opening pages." Molly Drayton, the idealistic daughter of Republican parents, is twelve years old when she tells JFK that she loves him at a New York campaign stop in 1960. Across the country, thirteen year-old Jack Masterson and his widowed mother are leaving Ohio for a new life in California. In alternating chapters, Molly and Jack journey toward their eventual meeting in 1970, a parallel narrative through the counter-culture wars at home and the battlefields of Vietnam. When a chance meeting brings them together, they embark on a cross-country road trip and a volatile love affair, both fleeing the dissolution of the world they knew. Jack is a shattered veteran of the war. Estranged from her powerful family, disillusioned by the violent collapse of the protest movement, Molly hopes her love will free them. "Finigan's light touch saves the book from becoming simply yet another book about the 1960s," Indie Reader's reviewer writes. "…LOVE AND WAR is a worthy choice for anyone who understands how loving someone can be both a miraculous and painful choice."
About the author
At the height of the Vietnam War, author Linda Hanley Finigan shared a Washington, DC jail cell with Leonard Bernstein's wife, while next door, Judy Collins serenaded the cell block with an a capella version of "Amazing Grace." She worked on Capitol Hill as a Congressional aide to Arizona Democrat Morris K. Udall, and as a spokesperson for the People's Coalition for Peace and Justice. As an independent filmmaker, she was recipient of a grant from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences. She graduated from the State University of New York at Buffalo where she served as editor-in-chief of the student newspaper, The Spectrum. She holds a Master's degree in Radio, Television and Motion Pictures from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she minored in American History. She grew up near New York City, and counts among her quirkier memories, the day she was part of the studio audience when the Beatles made their American debut on Ed Sullivan.

Book Reviews

to submit a book review