Record Details
Book cover

They are soldiers

Book  - 2004
  • ISBN: 076530547X :
  • Physical Description 351 pages ; 25 cm
  • Edition 1st ed.
  • Publisher New York : Forge Books, [2004]

Content descriptions

General Note:
"A Tom Doherty Associates book."
Citation/References Note:
Publ Weekly July 26,2004
Kirkus July 15,2004
Target Audience Note:
Adult.
Adult.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 076530547X
They Are Soldiers
They Are Soldiers
by Coyle, Harold
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Kirkus Review

They Are Soldiers

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Army Reservists patrol a border zone between Israel and the new Palestinian state: another slow starting, torpidly written, but shatteringly suspenseful tale of near-future military engagement. With 13 books behind him, most of them character-driven examinations of speculative military conflicts, Coyle isn't about to change his ways. His prose is among the most leaden in the military thriller genre. His clunky stretches of dialogue bog down in digressive exposition and tedious correctness (like the proper use of "roger, wilco, over and out"), and his plots tend to feature conflict between a hot-headed, fatuously self-assured West Point officer and a plodding, uncertain grunt, both of whom learn--in a series of wonderfully suspenseful, sharply detailed, blink-and-you-missed-it battle scenes--that surviving combat involves far more than pointing your weapon and pulling the trigger. Though his current story is set in Israel along a demilitarized zone, it continues the theme Coyle developed in More Than Courage (2003): the challenge, horror, and awesome cost that are entailed in policing the Middle East. As for Coyle's strengths, they've never shown better than here as he defines the uniquely earnest, conflicted, small-town characters of this band of Virginia Reservists who leave family and friends to become objects of hatred and contempt from both sides of the border. Before they can get totally accustomed to their lose-lose situation, they discover a terrorist plot involving biological weapons, then launch a desperate, and technically illegal, counterstrike into Palestinian territory. As always, the build-up is long and problematic, but the battle scenes save the day. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 076530547X
They Are Soldiers
They Are Soldiers
by Coyle, Harold
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Publishers Weekly Review

They Are Soldiers

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Coyle (More Than Courage) chills with a sometimes clumsily written but disturbingly plausible story about a Virginia National Guard unit facing the threat of biological weapons in a security zone between Israelis and a new Palestinian state. Coyle narrates from numerous perspectives, including that of Guard members-postmen, volunteer firefighters-from tiny Bedlow, Va., and the military officers commanding their unit. In the Middle East, Coyle also enters the minds of Syed Amama, a young Palestinian suicide bomber who miraculously survived a successful mission, and Hammed Kamel, a microbiologist determined to rid the new state of its American and Israeli scourge. Chapters about the American deployment are heartfelt but boilerplate, as husbands leave pregnant wives and Coyle describes in excessive detail the heroic patriotism of the military men and the complexities of the U.S. military situation. But a series of taut chapters in which the Americans come face to face with another suicide bomber raises the tension and the stakes, and the stirring climax describes a dangerous raid on Kamel's weapons lab after Amama manages to infect some of the guardsmen with a deadly biological agent. The revolving-character door may leave readers dizzy by the time they reach the climax, but for those who don't mind a heavy hand and a bit of excess patriotism, this is a solid read. Agent, Scott Miller at Trident. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved