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My Father's Secret War
Author: Lucinda Franks
Publisher: Miramax Books
Reviewer:
Rob Ballister--MWSA
Board Member
A woman
searches for the man her father once was.
Pulitzer Prize
winning journalist Lucinda Franks relates the heart wrenching story of her
search for her father's past.
Tom Franks was
a young, outgoing, affectionate man when he entered the US Navy to help win
World War II. Though he returned physically uninjured, he was never
the same man again. He was reclusive, cold towards his wife, and a
heavy drinker. Growing up with him, though there were high points, was
not a happy childhood experience for the author and her sister, Penny.
After the death of her mother, Lucinda revives the relationship with her
father, and through patience learns of some of his war experiences, many of
which don't match up at all with his official file. Lucinda is shocked
to learn that her father was a covert operative, a real life spy, who
participated in clandestine operations all over Europe and the Pacific
Theater as part of a little known program called Argus. He witnessed
first hand the suffering in the death camps, and at one point had to kill a
fellow operative, and these experiences forever changed him.
Through the
journey to learn about his past, Lucinda befriends her father's mistress,
and many of his fellow servicemembers, all of whom were by that time in
their eighties. She learns about the man he once was, and through that
is able to recognize some of those attributes in the man he became later in
life.
The story is
well written, and moves well, with a heavy dose of emotion along with the
facts. Though a memoir and not a history lesson, any history buff will
learn a bit about clandestine operations in World War II. Further, it
is a must read for those with an interest in understanding how combat stress
affects the family dynamic.

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