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About the Author

Ed Ruggero is the author of Duty First: West Point and the Making of American Leaders, in addition to five novels about the military. He is an experienced keynote speaker on leadership and leadership development, and was an infantry officer in the United States Army for eleven years

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Works by Ed Ruggero

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Common Knowledge

Legal name
Ruggero, Edward Joseph
Birthdate
1956-11-26
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

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Reviews

15 reviews
What drew me to the title initially was that it covered the 82nd Airborne and their role in Operation Husky. It seems most histories, if they are going to be about American Airborne troops in WWII, cover the 101st and Normandy.

I appreciated this insight, the author does a great job of weaving first hand accounts into a cohesive narrative. There isn't a ton of strategic level viewpoints and there really doesn't need to be in my opinion. The book does just what it says on the cover and does show more it very well. show less
When the army assigns military police Lieutenant Eddie Harkins to investigate a surgeon’s murder at a field hospital outside Palermo, Sicily, in August 1943, it’s the last thing he wants. A former beat cop in Philadelphia, Harkins knows next to nothing about detective work, and the internecine warfare at the hospital threatens to overwhelm him — as if fighting the Germans didn’t cause enough trouble.

No one misses the victim, an arrogant lech who sexually abused the nurses, bunked show more alone and had no friends, but wielded a scalpel like a genius, which, to the hospital commanding officer, was all that mattered. The all-powerful first sergeant, responsible for making the hospital run, resents Harkins on sight and won’t cooperate with the investigation. The CO wonders why a beat cop should lead the inquiry — couldn’t the provost’s office send anyone better? — and Harkins is inclined to agree.

Nevertheless, orders are orders, and Harkins quickly discovers that wherever he probes, something stinks, which leads him further on. I don’t want to give anything away, but let’s say that the surgeon’s murder and the sexual abuse are just the beginning. Working on little sleep and facing obdurate officers who seem to have plenty to hide, Harkins finds his moxie. His stubbornness and sense of justice take hold, and he now insists on solving the case. He fears that if he doesn’t, the corruption will spread, and he gets wind that the brass wants to send him packing. Sensing resistance, he digs in and keeps fighting.

Such headaches have compensations, however. Eddie gets to talk to his older brother, Patrick, chaplain to a nearby regiment, their first conversation in more than a year. Also, a childhood friend, Kathleen Donnelly, is a nurse at the field hospital, and Harkins has always had a thing for her. She’s also an exceptionally competent, confident professional, and the reader will be awed, just as Harkins is.

Her story, and those of the other nurses, is one reason to read Blame the Dead. With impressive authority, Ruggero conveys the impossible conditions in which these women work heroically to save horribly mangled men, only to have to dodge unwanted advances (and worse) by men protected from complaint or protest. As you might imagine, the army is the last place where a woman’s word carries weight, and this is 1943, so forget notions of respect, let alone equality. Whatever happens must be their fault, anyway, saith those in charge.

That authorial authenticity extends to the soldiers’ dialogue and interactions. Ruggero graduated West Point and served as an officer, but he’s also researched his ground thoroughly, re-creating the hierarchy, atmosphere, and workings of a World War II field hospital, as well as the city of Palermo, which emerges vividly. Rest assured that nothing comes easily for Harkins, who’s continually out of his depth; the pages turn rapidly. As a sidelight, I also appreciate the criticisms the author has his characters make of General George Patton’s callousness toward his soldiers, for which the field hospital picks up the pieces—literally.

Much as I like the story, though, Blame the Dead feels cluttered, with at least a couple too many voices, nonstop everything, and no time or space to reflect on intense, earth-shaking events. Partly that’s the genre, and Harkins is working under tremendous pressure of time, which Ruggero cleverly squeezes. Yet I hope that in future adventures (this novel promises a series), the author shows the confidence to slow down a little, especially when the addition of still more stuff begins to seem contrived.

The villain's a contrivance too, unraveling toward the end into lunacy, a cop-out I dislike. As for the villainy, that takes such elaborate, baroque turns that I kept wishing that Occam’s razor, to which one character refers, applied here. Those complications further require the resolution to become a sequence of derring-do that evokes more than one cliché.
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I am a fan of military and historical fiction themed books. Usually when I see a book in this vein as this book by Mr. Ruggero, I jump to check out the book. Thus the reason I am sad that I struggled with this book.

I instantly was transported back in time. I got a clear vision of the world and the characters that Mr. Ruggero built for this book. Yet, I found myself missing that strong connection towards the characters; except maybe Colianno. He was a young guy that was assigned to Eddie to show more be taken under his wing. There was a bit of a mystery about Colianno. They more I got to know him the more I did like him.

In regards, to the main mystery, it was good. The other issue I had with this book besides the connection to the characters is that I found the pacing of the story to be slow. At times there was a bit too much time spent on talking or the build up to the mystery that I felt slowed the story down. While, this book may not have hit me in al the right spots; there is something in the way Mr. Ruggero writes that does make me want to give him another chance.
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One of the doctors at this army field hospital is found murdered. He was NOT a “nice” guy. As a matter of fact, it could have been any number of people who could have committed this crime. Eddie Harkins is a military police officer and he has just stumbled upon this murder. He is a little out of his league. He has no idea what he is doing. The deeper he gets into the investigation the more questions he has.

There is a lot going on in this book. I was hooked from the get go! I love show more anything WWII and this unusual setting of an army field hospital was so mesmerizing to me. I learned so much. It is just hard to imagine what these nurses went through. The constant threat of assault, the dirt, the blood…these women were tough!

The characters, the setting and the murder investigation make this novel enthralling. The story did sort of lose steam in the middle but I still found it intriguing and very unique.

I received this novel from the publisher for a honest review.
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