2024; 504 pages. New Author? : No. Book #11 (out of 11) in the Captain Hawklin Adventures series. Genres : Pulp Fiction; World War 2; Military Fiction. Overall Rating: 9*/10.
It’s 1940 and Americans can smell the smoke of the second World War in the wind. Which is not
surprising since much of Europe and Asia are already embroiled in fighting.
Captain Steven Hawklin’s
friends and fellow Crusaders are scattered all over the globe. Hardy Miller is in Crown City, California
attending to the business affairs of Hawklin’s flight school. Desa Wintergreen is in Paris, on some sort
of mission so secret that she won’t even divulge the details to Steven.
Who knows where Steven’s
friend and fellow American Zane Carrington is?
He could be anywhere on the Pacific Ocean, hiding out so he doesn’t get
arrested and put on trial in America for murder.
And Steven? He and his longtime friend Oscar “Oz” Lyman
are presently in a plane over a very hostile Japan, carrying out an affair of
honor, while a bunch of Japanese Zero fighter planes try to shoot them down.
In other words, Captain
Hawklin is just doing his usual stuff.
What’s To Like...
Captain Hawklin At
War is the latest entry in Charles F. Millhouse’s “New Pulp” Captain Hawklin Adventures series. The book is divided into six sections, each
one spanning a year’s worth of dashing deeds, beginning in 1940 and closing
with 1945.
For the most part we tag along on the escapades of the characters mentioned above, switching from one hero
to another, with the happy result of a ton of thrills, spills, and nefarious
conniving, without any slow spots. If
you’re new to the series, like I was, there are some very helpful “Character Bios” at the start of the book,
including one for a baddie I was especially intrigued by, Maximilian Odenthal.
Each section starts with a
quick recap of the historical World War 2 events that take place that year, but
keep in mind that Captain Hawklin At War is a work of the Pulp Fiction
genre. Although clearly on the side of
the allies, Captain Hawklin and his associates are battling
the Nazis in a different, lesser-known arena: Occult Mysticism. It may surprise some readers that there is
historical justification for this, but several of the leading Nazis did dabble in it. The Wikipedia link about this subject is
here.
I loved the character
development in Captain Hawklin At War.
Yes, the Crusaders are all Pulp heroes, but they can get on each other’s
nerves at times, and Hawklin himself can be short-tempered, especially when around high
military/government muckamucks and/or his in-laws. The two main female characters, Desa and
Juno, are not the sort you want to be condescending to. And Hawklin’s Crusaders are integrated, much
to the discomfort of the US Navy.
There are a slew of characters
to meet and greet, some of which I’m sure are recurring from the earlier books
in this series. The bad guys are just as
resourceful as the good guys, and I always like that. I’m a history buff, so I appreciated the
tie-ins to World War 2 events, but I’m also a sci-fi/fantasy enthusiast, so the
pterodactyls, tree people, lizard men, and zombies delighted me as well. I thought the catacombs scene was
particularly well done.
Despite their far-flung
starting points, the main characters eventually come together for an exciting,
action-packed ending. The #1 bad guy,
Sykes Revan, is a formidable opponent, whose planning and anticipation skills
are incredible. Anyone foolish or brave
enough to confront him does so, knowing the outcome will be costly.
Ratings…
Amazon: -.-*/5, based on 0 ratings
and 0 reviews.
Goodreads: -.--*/5,
based on 0
ratings and 0 reviews.
Kewlest New Word…
Cataleptic
(adj.) : resembling a condition where
the body is stiff, and stops moving, as if dead.
Excerpts...
“What’s your business here?” another
English soldier asked as Zane and the others came nearer.
Keeping his pistol leveled to the ground,
Zane said, “I’m the captain of the Fortitude. Just wanting to get my ship and get the hell
out of here.”
“You should have left hours ago,” the first
soldier said as he lowered his rifle away.
“You’ll be lucky if you can clear the harbor before you’re blown out of
the water.”
“That’s a chance I’m willing to take,” Zane
said.
“Why are you Americans so pigheaded, ay?”
“We come by it natural,” Zane replied. (pg. 194)
“Don’t let it get to you. It’s war.”
Hardy stood. “It’s war,” he said in a dark tone as he
turned away from the boy’s body. He
regarded Demonte in a fever pitch of ferocity.
“That one simple word with so much power, that gives us immunity from
committing the most heinous of acts.
It’s war will be a phrase that criminals hide behind, that soldiers will
tell themselves when medals are pinned to their chest. How many of the dead will be forgotten,
whittled down to, it is war? How will
history remember this time? ‘It was war’
they will say. But how many more wars
will we have to face, huh. How many more
innocents will die behind the phrase, ‘’it’s war?’” (pg. 382)
“Why is it, Max,
that every time there’s a castle around, I find you lurking in it?” (pg. 291)
The profanity is
sparse in Captain Hawklin At War. I noticed just nine instances in the first 20% (100 pages) of the book, and they were all of
the milder ilk. I don’t recall any
“adult situations”, and the one racial epithet later on is given its proper
comeuppance by Oz.
My main issue is the number of
typos in the book. Some examples: Oman/Orman, Oaf/Oof, flower/flour, Metals/Medals,
distain/disdain, fare-shear/fair share, and many more. I’d suggest another round of editing before
the next edition is published.
But enough of the
quibbling. Captain Hawklin At War
is an incredibly ambitious undertaking by Charles F. Millhouse to: a.) chronicle the efforts of at least
seven major characters over the course of entire Second World War and in all
parts of the world; b.) do so
with utter clarity and no slow spots; c.) seamlessly blend Military History with New Pulp Fantasy; and d.) keep the reader turning the pages to
see what happens next.
Ambitious? Yes.
Successful? Yes, on all four of
those endeavors. Despite being 500 pages
in length, Captain Hawklin At War was a quick read for me, mostly
because I kept reading “just one more chapter” to see which Crusader was going
to find himself/herself in what sort of new mayhem. So if you’re looking for a “pulpy”
action-adventure novel with a World War Two setting, this book is for you.
9 Stars. One last thing. If you’re new to this series, and upon finishing Captain Hawklin At War, you want to read more stories about our hero, a section titled “The Captain Hawklin Timeline”, located at the end of the book, lists 10 more novels and 8 more short stories featuring him. Happy reading!
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