What does it take to kill your fellow man?
The horrors of World War One yield the answer for one troubled
young man from Littlemore who finds himself at war on two fronts:
at home and in the trenches - where his enemies number comrades as
well as Germans. His pursuit of inner peace leads to the ultimate
sacrifice.
A terrified teenage boy plunges from a bridge into a river
before a baying mob of his peers.
Jumping from the Black Bridge is a rite of passage for every
Littlemore lad on the cusp of manhood. It is meant to represent a
test of courage. But Max Lanham is a self-reliant only-child,
unafraid to walk alone, a maverick who regards this as a futile
gesture. He is torn: scared to jump but even more scared of the
consequences of not doing so.
The ordeal marks Max Lanham out as a misfit and a man constantly
at war with his conscience. His isolation is replicated in his
dysfunctional family presided over by a manipulative mother
Intellectual comfort he draws from a former teacher, now a
conscientious objector; fellowship he derives from a simple
farm-lad who hero-worships him; while physical solace he finds in
the arms of the village prostitute. Ultimately, he seeks peace of
mind by forgoing his place at Oxford University in favour of
volunteering to fight in the trenches with the Ox & Bucks.
The horrors of war deepen his anguish. He sees operations
botched; men routinely slaughtered. Even first-love cannot halt his
slide toward madness.
Then a final family row reveals a secret that sends him hurtling
toward his destiny. He must brave an ordeal worse than the Black
Bridge.
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