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Wayne Turner

Author of North Africa: Flames of War

31+ Works 116 Members 3 Reviews

Works by Wayne Turner

North Africa: Flames of War (2009) 17 copies
Eastern Front (2009) 9 copies
Flames of War: Forces (2011) 5 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Turner, Wayne
Legal name
Turner, Wayne Arthur
Gender
male
Organizations
Battlefront Miniatures
Nationality
New Zealand
Places of residence
Auckland, New Zealand
Associated Place (for map)
Auckland, New Zealand

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
This novel tells the story of Wendell Patterson, whom we first meet when he is around 13 years old. That is when Wendell first meets Maggie Burns, who will have a major impact on him for next 12 years or so.

Wendell is the son of the local doctor, a man he has trouble relating to. Wendell's mother left when he was just a toddler and he romanticizes her, not wanting to see the truth. Maggie is the daughter of a local businessman, whose wife is a patient of Dr. Patterson's. Maggie is a strange show more person, and we see glimpses of why this may be. She may be responsible for the drowning of her younger brother. She has a strange relationship with one of her father's borders, Elliot, who is not who or what he appears to be. And she has a strong hold on Wendell, who loves her despite not knowing who she really is.

The novel is set in the early 1900s and creates a strong sense of that era in Canada. We see the impact of family secrets...things that aren't discussed or accepted. We also see a story of obsession and self-forgiveness that is very well told.
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½
The best thing about Battlefront organization chart books is the capsule historical summaries, particularly as they include some fine and colorful maps (books by academic publishers are often very poor in maps, and they are very seldom in color). On the other hand, the historical summaries, while for the most part excellent, are also unsourced -- the reader has no idea where they came from and can't use them to find additional information. One additional pet peeve is that the names of towns show more are often spelled inconsistently or even incorrectly. In this book, the map on the back endpaper is in error; it reverses the situation on the southern portion of the Western Front, showing the border of France as the area occupied by the Allies as of Dec.1944, and vice-versa. show less
½
This is a Late War intelligence briefing for Allied troops fighting in Italy from the Salerno landings through the German surrender. One bizarre rule is for the use of “Wojtek the Soldier Bear” with the Polish II Corps, though it is based on a historical fact.
½

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Associated Authors

Phil Yates Contributor, Author
Ken Camel Contributor
Mike Haught Contributor
Vincent Wai Illustrator, Cover artist
Casey Davies Designer, Illustrator
Victor Pesch Illustrator, Designer, Cover artist
Michael Haught Contributor
Sean Goodison Illustrator, Designer, Contributor
Scott Elaurant Contributor
Warren May Illustrator
Ben Wooten Illustrator
Van Norton Contributor
Alessandro Fasolo Contributor
Ben Wootten Illustrator
Michael McSwiney Contributor
Steve Bernich Contributor
Sean Ireland Contributor
Bede Bailey Contributor
Jonathon Forsey Contributor
Dion Holswich Designer
Warren Mahy Illustrator
Richard Chambers Contributor
Alun Gallie Contributor
Heath Alexander Contributor
Jyrki Saari Contributor
Andrew Haught Contributor
Rich Hamilton Contributor
Todd Powell Contributor
Gregg Siter Contributor
Mitch Kemmis Contributor
Nathan Ward Contributor
Stephen Smith Contributor
Gary Martin Contributor
Joe Abrisz Contributor
James Huff Contributor
Thomas Weller Contributor
Stuart Ellis Contributor
Thomas Mcbride Contributor

Statistics

Works
31
Also by
2
Members
116
Popularity
#169,720
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
3
ISBNs
29

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