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Tender Victory (1956)

af Taylor Caldwell

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1292211,331 (3.73)2
Rev. Johnny Fletcher serves wounded soldiers from the battlefield as a military chaplain during World War II. His forte is spiritual solace in the darkest of times, but his life changes when he performs a public heroic act: facing down an angry mob intent on attacking five young Holocaust survivors. Upon learning they have no homes or families to return to, Fletcher decides to bring them to America. To his dismay, his coal-mining community of Barryfield, Pennsylvania, greets this makeshift family with prejudice and distrust. Beneath the town's placid surface run buried religious divisions. Fletcher's commitment to raising the children according to their individual faiths-two Protestant, two Catholic, and one Jewish-meets with horrific levels of intolerance. Dealing with such prejudice turns more sinister still when a local newspaper publisher cynically uses the story for his own purposes. Together with Lorry Summerfield, the beautiful, disillusioned daughter of Barryfield's most powerful figure, Fletcher must try to awaken the townspeople to the better angels of their nature before it's too late.… (mere)
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The title of this book should be "No Good Deed Goes Unpunished". The preacher has overwhelming kindness bringing five orphans from war ravished Europe but naïve for thinking that humanity can separate prejudice. Evil can rear its ugly head no matter where you are or under what circumstances. Expecting a warm welcome, he is surprised at the hatred he faces. A Pulitzer Prize winner with emotions that run overboard, sometimes to the extreme. A book suited for those who wear their heart on their sleeve. ( )
  delta61 | Oct 18, 2021 |
The plot is enough to grab you: a minister named John Fletcher finds five children in post-WW II Europe who have all been victims in concentration camps. These "wolf children" were moments from certain death by an angry mob before Fletcher intervenes and rescues them. Though they are unfit for society, as damaged as they are in health and mind, the minister takes them in and adopts them as his own.

Upon returning to the United States, Fletcher has a hard time finding a post in a church because of people's intolerance to these savage children. Though these people claim to be good Christians, they have a hard time accepting those different from their own. These people are shown to be so sheltered in their own safe and happy world in the United States that they have a hard time facing the atrocities of "foreigners" faced in war. One point for Taylor Caldwell, I thought as I read, and figured what happened then could certainly apply to the present. Only it grew more ridiculous at this point as John Fletcher manipulates the sensibilities of these close-minded people and forces them to face what they did not want to see.

The book is basically John's fight for tolerance and understanding, and it's a nice point of view, but it was unbelievable to me how easily the people in this book were swayed to see the other side of the coin. You cannot falter so easily from one opinion to the other. It shows a wonderful faith in people, but realistically we aren't so keen on expanding our views, not due to one lecture, anyway.

There were too many coincidences in this book, too many pretty packages tied with bows, and while tragedy struck towards the end of the book, you couldn't help but wonder how someone who mourned so violently would or could recover so quickly and find faith in mankind, even when it involved the death of a loved one at the hands of human cruelty.

It was a lovely little book to read, but I couldn't help rolling my eyes in certain places, especially when Minister John went on another soul-saving, view-changing-of-the-mindless mission.

Do I recommend this book? Yes, but with the premises of the novel it could have been so much more. More plot, more character depth, a meatier romance, a dirtier view of the atrocities these children faced, and certainly a lot less lecturing. ( )
  quillmenow | Apr 30, 2008 |
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Rev. Johnny Fletcher serves wounded soldiers from the battlefield as a military chaplain during World War II. His forte is spiritual solace in the darkest of times, but his life changes when he performs a public heroic act: facing down an angry mob intent on attacking five young Holocaust survivors. Upon learning they have no homes or families to return to, Fletcher decides to bring them to America. To his dismay, his coal-mining community of Barryfield, Pennsylvania, greets this makeshift family with prejudice and distrust. Beneath the town's placid surface run buried religious divisions. Fletcher's commitment to raising the children according to their individual faiths-two Protestant, two Catholic, and one Jewish-meets with horrific levels of intolerance. Dealing with such prejudice turns more sinister still when a local newspaper publisher cynically uses the story for his own purposes. Together with Lorry Summerfield, the beautiful, disillusioned daughter of Barryfield's most powerful figure, Fletcher must try to awaken the townspeople to the better angels of their nature before it's too late.

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