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Two O'Clock, Eastern Wartime [Mass Market Paperback]

John Dunning (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (45 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 2, 2002

Widely acclaimed for his groundbreaking crime novels Booked to Die and The Bookman's Wake, award-winning author John Dunning triumphantly returns with a riveting new thriller that takes us back to the summer of 1942, when radio was in its prime, when daylight saving time gave way to "wartime," when stations like WHAR on the New Jersey coast struggled to create programming that entertained and inspired a nation in its dark hour.

Into this intense community of radio artists and technicians in Regina Beach, New Jersey, come Jack Dulaney and Holly Carnahan. They are determined to find Holly's missing father, whose last desperate word came from this noisy seaside town. Holly sings like an angel and has what it takes to become a star. Jack -- a racetrack hot-walker and novelist who's hit every kind of trouble in his travels from sea to sea -- tries out as a writer at WHAR and soon discovers a passion for radio and a natural talent for script writing.

While absorbing the ways of radio, from writing to directing, he meets some extraordinarily brave and gifted people who touch his life in ways he could not have imagined -- actresses Rue, Pauline, and Hazel; actor-director Waldo, creator of the magnificent black show Freedom Road; and enigmatic station owner Loren Harford, among others.

Jack's zeal for radio is exceeded only by his devotion to Holly, who needs his help but who is terrified for his safety. Strange things are happening in Regina Beach, starting with an English actor who walked out of the station six years ago and was never seen again. And Holly's father is gone too, in equally puzzling circumstances. As Jack and Holly penetrate deeper into the shadows of the past, they learn that someone will do anything, including murder, to hide some devastating truths.

In a stunning novel that transcends genre, John Dunning calls upon his vast knowledge of radio and his incisive reading of history to create a poignant, page-turning work of fiction that sheds new insights on some of the most harrowing events of the twentieth century. Like E. L. Doctorow's Billy Bathgate or Caleb Carr's The Alienist, Dunning's brilliant tale of mystery, murder, and revenge brings to life another time, another place, another world.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

John Dunning's previous novels featuring a sleuth who's an expert in rare and collectible books won this former bookstore owner a devoted following; first editions of Booked to Die and The Bookman's Wake routinely fetch high sums in stores like the one Dunning himself owned for many years. With the verisimilitude that's a hallmark of his writing, Dunning delves into a new topic, the golden days of radio, igniting the reader's excitement about the enormous potential of the medium. Sadly, he can't assuage the inevitable disappointment over how that potential was wasted:
"Radio is the greatest invention of the past four centuries. It ranks right up there with Gutenberg's movable type as an earthshaking force.... One of the first things Gutenberg did with his movable type was print a magnificent Bible. The first thing radio did was argue how much selling would be permitted and how ridiculous it would be allowed to get. If it keeps on the way it's going there won't be anything worth listening to.... I have this almost morbid fear of the future--not that radio's greatest days will fade away but that its greatest day will never come. Fifty years from now it could just be a medium of hucksters and fools, a whorehouse in the sky."
The speaker is Jack Dulaney, a novelist who follows a dead man's trail to the Jersey shore in the early days of World War II, where a radio station owned by a recluse has fallen on hard times. The mysterious Harford, who built the station as a showcase for his late wife's ambition, has all but abandoned WHAR, but the actors, writers, producers, and technicians who once shared the dead woman's dream are galvanized by the appearance of Dulaney, who finds his true métier in the creation of original, politically provocative broadcast dramas. He also discovers true love in a talented young singer, Holly Carnahan, whose affections he once sacrificed out of loyalty to his best friend.

Carnahan's search for her missing father involves Dulaney in a mystery rooted in the long-ago Boer War that has grown into a conspiracy peopled by German saboteurs, Irish nationalists, and African freedom fighters. The plotting is dense and the cast of minor characters merely sketched, but Dulaney's creative process is artfully drawn and the ambience of America in wartime is skillfully portrayed. --Jane Adams --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Several times in his writing career, Dunning (The Bookman's Wake) has used his personal passions and interests as settings for his thrillersDhorse racing, book collecting, the city of Denver. This time he dials up the rhythms of 1940s classic radio (which he profiled in the nonfiction Tune In Yesterday). Despite its exceptional period evocation and character development, however, this effort suffers from ponderous pacing and a confusing plot. Jack Dulaney is a troubled young writer grappling with second-novel freezeup and a mild case of wartime guilt: he can't serve in WWII because of a hearing disability. While working as an itinerant horse walker in Southern California, Jack befriends Marty Kendall, an out-of-work radio actor who has a mysterious connection to the woman Jack loves but can't have, Holly Carnahan. When Marty is murdered, Jack knows Holly is in trouble and follows her trail to a New Jersey shore town. Holly is looking for her father, who vanished while employed as a handyman at nearby radio station WHAR. Jack lands a writing job at the station, where he discovers his true talent as the creator of radio dramas. But all is not kosher at WHAR. Jack suspects some of its engineers, producers and actors might be involved in recent deaths and disappearances, and might be playing roles in a Nazi espionage operation. Dunning catches the excitement and passion behind the artistic promise and social power of radio during that time, but the radio arcana overpowers and ultimately distracts from the book's driving forceDthe murder conspiracy. Yet Dunning fans will no doubt leap for this overlong intrigue on the strength of the author's Nero Wolfe Award-winning past. Agent, Phyllis Westberg. 11-city author tour. (Jan.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 528 pages
  • Publisher: Pocket (January 2, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 074340615X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743406154
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (45 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,631,237 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Although I have been writing fiction since childhood (and publishing novels since 1975), it was BOOKED TO DIE (1992) that gave me the freedom to write full time. I have always written out of my own life. My Bookman novels came from my ongoing experience in the used and rare book trade, coupled with my life as a Denver Post police reporter in the 1970s. I have written five novels about my book detective, Cliff Janeway, including THE BOOKWOMAN'S LAST FLING, to be published by Scribner in May 2006.

We have lived in Denver, it seems, forever, though I am a refugee from Charleston, SC. I have also been a glass cutter, a groom at Santa Anita and other racetracks, a publicist for political candidates (which is the same general thing)and did a radio show for more than 20 years.


 

Customer Reviews

45 Reviews
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4 star:
 (14)
3 star:
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2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (45 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dunning Makes A Great Return, March 10, 2001
By 
L. Quido "quidrock" (Tampa, FL United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
I am so fortunate that I acquired a signed first edition of this book, because I will treasure it for years to come. In his newest, Dunning crafts a story of a writer, caught up in a mystery due to a lost love. Stumbling through America in the war years, he manages to find a way to bring the truth to life, but along the way he finds himself in the broadcast radio game, and it is there that his talent truly comes alive. Dunning tops the story off with a coda that leaves the reader guessing as to whom Jack/Jordan finally spends the rest of his life with.

I haven't given up on the return of Cliff Janeway, the "Bookman" and hope that Dunning will return to his hero in the future, but "Two O'Clock Eastern Wartime" is an outstanding read.

Remembering my parents & grandparents talking about sitting around the radio for hours to listen, learn and be entertained, I always wondered about the attraction - Dunning has helped put that in perspective by giving the reader a sense of the magic that was radio during the war years in the 30's and 40's. Obviously an expert on the topic, he wraps his knowledge around a well written mystery with a hero you can really care about and an interesting cast of bit players.

I am a mystery/thriller buff, and don't often come across truly great writing - the thrill is the mystery itself, the element of surprise and sometimes disaster. Dunning can do it all. He can share a mystery with his readers but the quality of his own writer's craftsmanship appears throughout the novel, and makes it come alive..."He dreamed that there was no war. Got up at three and exploded into his work, as if the answer to everything lay in some unwritten script still hidden away in his mind..."; Dunning captures the thrill and the fulfillment of being a great writer and shares it with all of us who have never known that rush.

Please read "Two O'clock Eastern Wartime", you will have no regrets.

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Book, Amazing Writer!, May 25, 2004
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This review is from: Two O'Clock, Eastern Wartime (Mass Market Paperback)
Dunning, where have you been all my life? From the very first words of this book, you know that you are in the hands of a master. This is the most beautifully written mystery I've ever read!

The pace is leisurely, but that's all to the good. By taking its time, the book gives you the chance to really get to know the main character, Jack/Jordan, and he is one of the most compelling characters in fiction. 1940s America and life in a small-town radio station are beautifully evoked. What impressed me most is that, unlike many historical novels which seem to be a frozen slice in time with no antecedents, this book has enough references to culture and events in the 1930s that the wartime in which the book is set makes sense and has context. Jack himself, who has bummed around race tracks doing menial jobs like horse walking, seems very much a man of the 1930s Depression, rootless and scraping by, but looking for something to cling to.

The mystery itself is satisfyingly complex. In fact, through most of the book, you're not even sure what the mystery is! Who is after Jack and why?

I was sad to reach the end of the book, because I wanted to spend more time in this world.

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Intimate Epic to Thrill and Treasure, December 14, 2000
By 
S. Berner (Cocoa, Fl USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
The book gets 5 stars only because 6 are unavailable. This magnicicent recreation of a time, a place, and an atmosphere that will seem as foreign to most younger readers as the sands of Mars is a marvelous achievement. Plot-wise, it is a credible mystery that grips the reader from page one. But it is so much more than that. The book's depiction of the early days of radio (which, alas, were also, unbeknownst to either the protagonists or the real world, the beginning of the last days of radio)are so detailed and involving that they may bring the art form back! The characters are real, complex, credible, and, rare for a thriller (or ANY book nowadays), people you get to know as well as your own, disfunctional, family. A few months ago there was a higly hyped tome called "The Advocate" which took place during WWII. It was awful. This book recreates that time, the people, the country, in such a way as to almost make one sad one wasn't part of it. And those radio stories! If my words don't move you to read this, as a thriller, as an historical piece, as a character study, well... buy the darn thing and make up your own words! If you do, you will!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
DULANEY dreamed there was no war. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
eastern wartime, war bond show, colored show, penny postcard
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Ten Eyck, March Flack, Miss Nicholas, Miss O'Hara, Paul Kruger, Rick Gary, Becky Hart, Ali Marek, Holly O'Hara, Jesus Christ, Jack Dulaney, New Jersey, Annie Riordan, Dark Silver, Miss Hart, Miss Teasdale, Regina Beach, Susan Daniels, Uncle Wally, South African, Peter Schroeder, United States, Joe Carella, Miss Carnahan
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