From Booklist:
Bill Walker is a staff sergeant in the Royal Military Police, a Redcap. After a patrol turns deadly, Walker, trying to sort out how his team could possibly have been ambushed, discovers that his commanding officer, Major Steadman, may be a little . . . well, unbalanced. At its heart, Callison's novel dramatizes a protracted duel between Walker, a good man, and Steadman, a sadistic psychopath. Spanning a decade (late 1950s to late 1960s), the story is epic in scale but, considering its subject matter, written with a surprisingly light touch. Callison packs the tale with the kind of vivid detail that keeps us flipping the pages. And Walker, who narrates, has an offbeat sense of humor ("I'm ruggedly handsome, too, by the way. As well as shameless about telling lies when not under oath"), and his self-deprecating wit often defuses moments that could have gone way over the dramatic top. An out-of-the-ordinary and very effective thriller. David Pitt
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From Publishers Weekly:
Popular British author Callison (The Judas Ship) is unlikely to attract much of an American following with this unpleasant military thriller that's heavy on gore but light on suspense. In 1957, Royal Military Police Sgt. Bill Walker is stationed in Cyprus, where the British forces are under fire from local terrorists. After narrowly evading death from an attack that claimed the life of a brother NCO, Walker stumbles across a war crime committed by his superior, Major Steadman—the execution of a young child whom the major claimed was a hostile. Later, the action shifts forward a decade to Germany, where more brutalities afford Walker the chance to try to bring Steadman to justice. Awkward prose, an anticlimactic denouement and Walker's levity in the face of horrific violence limit this one's appeal. (Nov.)
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