PRO CONNECT
Erin Maggard McClelland
Chris McClelland spent his early childhood in New York and southern Georgia, before moving to central Florida in 1975. He studied engineering at the University of Florida, and holds a BA and an MA in English from the University of Central Florida. He spent seven years teaching as an adjunct professor at various colleges around central Florida. In 1999, he was a contributor to the Bread Loaf Writer’s Conference. He later won the Florida Literary Arts Alliance Award for Short Fiction for his story, "Fine People." At that time he worked as a technical writer for Siemens Westinghouse. In 2004 he became a regular contributor to Narrative Magazine where he worked as an assistant editor. His nonfiction writing has appeared in Harper’s, Puerto Del Sol, and Mid-American Review. He is a member in good standing in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormons). He recently co-edited The Provo Canyon Review with his wife, Erin. They live in Orem, Utah with their two sons. His novel, In Love and War, has been published to many positive reviews. Since then, he has also published a novella and a short story collection.
“A sharp, moving reflection on how love can survive even the greatest trials.”
– Kirkus Reviews
A debut drama, set before and during World War II, which explores the distinction between friend and foe.
Mack McInnis meets Inga Kaufener in Florida in 1933, when they’re both 10 years old, and their friendship blossoms into romance in their senior year of high school. Inga’s German family had moved to America to escape the consequences of Hitler’s rise to power, but as the possibility of war between Germany and the United States becomes increasingly likely, she encounters scorn and distrust from her peers. In 1941, when American involvement in the war seems inevitable, Inga’s father, Juergen, discovers that he’s suspected of being a German spy. He decides to move his family back to their homeland in order to ensure their safety. In Inga’s absence, heartsick Mack listlessly sleepwalks through his college experience, finally dropping out to retreat to a cabin in the woods and suffer in solitude. When he’s drafted, he insists on not fighting Germans, but because he has experience piloting crop dusters, he’s assigned to a B-17 that’s tasked with bombing German sites—including Weimar, where he knows that Inga currently lives. Meanwhile, Inga realizes that she’s pregnant with Mack’s child and marries a local boy in order to save her family from dishonor. Even though her brother was conscripted to fight in the German military, she secretly works for the resistance movement opposing Adolf Hitler. Author McClelland deftly follows several characters whose lives are involuntarily turned upside down by war and who are compelled to fight. He provocatively raises profound questions about how one defines and compartmentalizes allies and enemies and the ways in which duty forces one to make difficult decisions. For such a short novel, however, there are too many parallel subplots; for example, Mack’s father’s battle with lung cancer is a needless digression that doesn’t do anything to illuminate the story’s main themes. Still, McClelland’s unembellished prose is confident and self-assured throughout, and the subject matter is as philosophically challenging as it is emotionally poignant.
A sharp, moving reflection on how love can survive even the greatest trials.
Pub Date: Sept. 10, 2016
ISBN: 978-1-5376-2753-3
Page count: 280pp
Publisher: CreateSpace
Review Posted Online: Sept. 5, 2018
In Love and War
Day job
Retired
Favorite author
Leo Tolstoy
Favorite book
War and Peace
Favorite line from a book
Every happy family is the same, but each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.
Favorite word
scintillate
Hometown
Longwood, Florida
Passion in life
breathing
Unexpected skill or talent
flying small gliders
McClelland, “Under Old Glory: A Novella of War, Love, and Faith” (Reviewed by Conor Hilton), 2021
© Copyright 2024 Kirkus Media LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Hey there, book lover.
We’re glad you found a book that interests you!
We can’t wait for you to join Kirkus!
It’s free and takes less than 10 seconds!
Already have an account? Log in.
OR
Sign in with GoogleTrouble signing in? Retrieve credentials.
Welcome Back!
OR
Sign in with GoogleTrouble signing in? Retrieve credentials.
Don’t fret. We’ll find you.