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The Code of Love: A True Story | 
enlarge | Author: Andro Linklater Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson Category: Book
List Price: £16.99 Buy Used: £0.02 You Save: £16.97 (100%)
New (5) Used (34) Collectible (1) from £0.02
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 623847
Media: Hardcover Pages: 288 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.6 x 1.1
ISBN: 0297643584 EAN: 9780297643586 ASIN: 0297643584
Publication Date: March 9, 2000 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: **SHIPPED FROM UK** We believe you will be completely satisfied with our quick and reliable service. All orders are dispatched as swiftly as possible! Buy with confidence!
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Andro Linklater, the travel writer and prize-winning biographer of Compton Mackenzie, has discovered a truly thrilling and heartrending story. Here is his account of unimaginable suffering and of love surviving across several years and many thousands of miles of separation. It is also a portrait of another age, of reticence and understatement, duty and loyalty, before our own age with its rather different values of "self-fulfilment" and the tell-all confessional. In the spring of 1939, the beautiful young Pamela Kirrage met and quickly became engaged to a handsome young RAF pilot called Donald Hill. Soon after, Hill was transferred out to Hong Kong. When the city fell to the invading Japanese Army, Hill was imprisoned in Sham Sui POW camp and what he suffered at the hands of the Japanese over the next few years left him a changed man for life. When he returned to Pamela and England, they got married but he could never talk about his time in the camp and eventually, in 1970, he was finally confined to hospital in a state of mental collapse. In 1985 he died in Pamela's arms. But the story does not end there. For Donald left behind a coded diary that took another decade to crack. When its meanings were revealed, it told the full story of just what had happened to Donald and, at last, Pamela understood. It is a remarkable account, sensitively written by Linklater, skilfully interweaving the thrills of code-breaking with the romantic early days and later dark days of Pamela and Donald's marriage. The Code of Love is fascinating, compassionate and deeply moving. --Christopher Hart
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| Customer Reviews:
An amazingly gripping story May 3, 2000 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I didn't know anything about this story before I bought this book but I got straight into it. It's a wonderful book and a very sad funny and moving tale. The writing carries you along, and you can easily imagine yourself in wartime England as well as appreciate the horrors of Donald Hill's prisoner of war camp. I would highly recommend this book.
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