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Repent in Haste

af John P. Marquand

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A chance encounter between a middle aged US war correspondent and a young navy flyer leaders to the war correspondent becoming involved in the flyer's family and his disaster of a marriage back home. William Briggs serves as a sort of father figure to Lt. James "Boysie" Boyden. Boyden himself is a sort of everyman, representing the middle class college man called to war in the Pacific during World War II. His personal life is a fiasco--but it's just like the tens of thousands, if not more, personal fiascoes brought about by the chaos of war. Beneath the surface, however, Marquand is telling his readers that this is just he sort of psychological buffer needed by men fighting in one campaign after another, where life can be snuffed out in the instant it takes a Japanese kamikaze to come out of the clouds and ram his plane onto the deck of an aircraft carrier. There is no real answer to it all but to persevere, even though the war itself has knocked askew all the pre-war world's sense of morality, propriety, and commitments.

Repent in Haste is one of Marquand's shorter works, a sketch really of a man (and many like him) at war. Briggs is almost the psychologist at work, here. More than a correspondent, he is a key to unlocking the lives of those under the constant threat of imminent death. Written in 1945, towards the end of World War II, Marquand is already anticipating the problems veterans will have returning to a peacetime society.

One final comment: Marquand is a writer capable of quite a wide variety of fiction. An author of detective novels, novels of manners, and psycho-social studies such as Repent in Haste. And he writes against such a broad canvass, a background that includes New England society, China and Japan in the 1930s, adventures on a Caribbean island, spy stories set in South America, and this novel set in both the South Pacific during World War II and back on the homefront on the East Coast. He has a gift for creating atmosphere that is realistic and detailed. ( )
  PaulCornelius | Apr 12, 2020 |
Well, I feel better. I'd previously read all six of the Mr. Moto novels by Marquand and found them delightful. Then I essayed to read his Pulitzer Prize winning novel and found it so uninteresting and dully written that I gave up about 18% of the way through. But, I felt guilty and figured I should jump back on the Marquand horse, so to speak. This was again a GoodRead, like Mr. Moto. All of which means, I suppose, that I am a literary philistine and nothing I say about books carries any consequence.

This book is a novella (~28000 words) set toward the end of World War II. The protagonist, William Briggs, is a war correspondent assigned to the Pacific Theater. Over time, he learns that one doesn't make close friendships during war. One never knows who is next to go, so one doesn't want to be overly involved in what happens. But, before he learns this lesson, he becomes friends with and concerned about Lieutenant Boyden, known as Boysie. Over time, Boysie tells Briggs his life story, and when Briggs is due for leave, and plans on going back to New York for a time, Boysie asks him to look up his family and his wife, Daisy, both of whom live in East Orange, New Jersey.

Most of the book discusses the relationships people make or not during war time, including short romances during leave, which sometimes lead to quick marriages. Boysie met Daisy while he was at flight school at Pensacola. She had been engaged to someone else, but said that he'd thrown her over. Thus she took up with Boysie, they got married and had an idyllic marriage during the week or two that they drove north from Pensacola to set Daisy up in East Orange, before Boysie had to head off to the Pacific Theater.

Naturally, by the time Briggs got to East Orange, there were complications, some with the Boyden family and some with Daisy. All in all, this was a nice tale of life during war. I think it would have made a great movie back in the day. I'm seeing it in my mind in black and white, because everything on the "big screen" was black and white back in the good old days.
( )
  lgpiper | Jun 21, 2019 |
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