This book is dynamite!
Colenso Books 68 PALATINE ROAD LONDON N16 8ST U.K.
colensobooks@gmail.com
Announcing the publication of a novel completed in the 1990s
but never published until now, many years after the author’s death -
AND MY MOTHER’S BITTER TEARS by DEMETRIUS TOTERAS
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Booksellers in the USA can order from the international book distributors
GARDNERS BOOKS LTD OF EASTBOURNE, UK (internationalsales@gardners.com)
In case of difficulty, or for alternative quotations for delivery direct from the printers, contact the publisher (colensobooks@gmail.com)
There is no doubt that this is, to a considerable extent, an
autobiographical novel. It is also clear that parts of it are fictional, but it
is not possible to define with any clarity the boundary between autobiography
and fiction. The author did serve in the US Army in the Korean War as an
underage soldier, and the novel begins with the narrator’s return from Korea,
suffering from what we would now call post-traumatic stress disorder. Finding
himself unable to face his family again, he is taken up by a young woman who
looks after him. This narrative breaks off to be resumed only in the final
chapter of the book, and there follow several chapters in which his early life
in San Francisco's Greektown in the 1940s is recounted. Conflicting demands —
of their families to be Greek and of their school to become Americans — drive
him and his best friend to obtain fake birth certificates, enabling them to
enlist, in 1949, at the age of fourteen, in the US infantry. Between basic
training and embarkation for the Far East they take a bizarre trip to Mexico,
where they become involved with a rich American couple who need to involve
others in their sex-life. The two teenage soldiers are sent to the Mariana
Islands where they are occupied in dismantling a World-War-Two ammunition dump.
After an explosion which kills some of their colleagues, they are granted
leave, and go to Japan. Through a series of mishaps there, they end up being
sent to Korea with the first scratch-force of US troops, following the news
that the North Koreans had crossed the 38th Parallel. They are involved in the
first US battles of the Korean War, battles in which the US army was repeatedly
defeated with immense loss of life. These battles are described in graphic and
horrific detail, bringing us face to face with the insanity and the horror of
war, and with the nature of fear. The book, though, is not without humour, and
much of the humour has to do with sex. In this the narrator and his buddy are
opposites: the narrator a romantic innocent, his buddy precocious and sex-mad.
Although, the narrative of the weeks after his return alone from Korea is
resumed in the concluding chapter, there is no conclusion, for we are left with
a final moment of dramatic suspense, unsure exactly what it is that has just
happened, and with no clue as to what the narrator’s future will be.