Blue Madonna (A Billy Boyle WWII Mystery Book 11)
Blue Madonna (A Billy Boyle WWII Mystery Book 11) book cover

Blue Madonna (A Billy Boyle WWII Mystery Book 11)

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$9.99
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Soho Crime
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James R. Benn is the author of the Billy Boyle World War II Mystery series, which includes the novels Billy Boyle , The First Wave , Blood Alone , Evil for Evil , Rag and Bone , and A Mortal Terror . A librarian for many years, he now writes full time and lives in Hadlyme, Connecticut. --This text refers to the audioCD edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One It was a nice day for a drive. Late May, but warm and sunny, which you couldn’t always count on in England. We sped past fields of ripening grain, sheep grazing on hillsides, and low, rolling hills, each topped with its own sunlit copse of trees. Small villages with quaint names like Lower Slaughter, Bourton-on-the-Water, Notgrove, and Sevenhampton disappeared behind us as we neared Cheltenham.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 It would have been nicer without the handcuffs. xa0xa0xa0xa0 And if my companions hadn’t been military police. Big, silent MPs. Both sergeants, both tight-lipped, both armed. xa0xa0xa0xa0 Unlike me. I’m a captain, I like to chew the fat, and I’d been relieved of my pistol. That left us with nothing in common except for our destination, the Services of Supply base on the outskirts of Cheltenham, a little corner of Gloucestershire that controlled all of Uncle Sam’s stockpiles of food, ammunition, fuel, and whatever else American forces needed to fight this war. Which was more than you could imagine. SOS reported to Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force—SHAEF—which was where I worked. Not that my flaming-sword shoulder patch had impressed the MPs, far as I could tell. xa0xa0xa0xa0 In addition to running the supply chain, SOS was responsible for judicial services. The commanding general, John C. H. Lee, had been nicknamed “Court House” in some quarters for his initials and his attitude. Which had me more worried than the handcuffs. The MP in the backseat had the key and would probably want his cuffs back when we got to the base. Court House Lee also ran the stockade, the kind of place where they tossed you in and forgot you. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Either of you guys cops before the war?” I asked, trying one last time to start a conversation. “I was.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 Silence. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Boston PD,” I continued, turning to catch the eye of the MP behind me. “Made detective right before Pearl Harbor. My dad’s a homicide detective. It’s kind of a family business.” No response. The jeep crested a hill, the winding road leading into a valley dotted with Quonset huts, tents, and swarming vehicles. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “That’s it,” the MP said, tapping the shoulder of the driver and ignoring me. We pulled up to a gate where more MPs inspected the driver’s paperwork. They gave me the once-over; lots of enlisted men got brought in sporting cuffs, but damn few captains in their Class A uniform did. I was a curiosity. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “What’d he do?” a sentry asked the guy in the backseat, nodding in my direction. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Open the goddamn gate,” was the only answer he got. I felt a little better knowing that my MP didn’t want to talk to anyone. But not much. xa0xa0xa0xa0 We drove down the main thoroughfare of the huge base. It was like being in a city, except instead of tall buildings, crates of supplies stacked three stories high and covered with camouflage netting cast shadows across the road. There were city blocks of long Quonset huts and wooden barracks painted a uniform pond-scum green. Huge tents with their guy lines stretched taut looked like the dreariest circus imaginable had come to town and forgotten to leave. Trucks weighed down with supplies lurched by, grinding gears and straining to haul their loads of Spam, artillery shells, or scotch destined for the senior ranks. xa0xa0xa0xa0 What the hell was I doing here? xa0xa0xa0xa0 The jeep pulled over in front of a Quonset hut. The walkway was lined with whitewashed stones, a sure sign that officers here didn’t like GIs with time on their hands. Signs were staked in the ground on either side of the walk. One read, Office of the Provost Marshal General, Criminal Investigation Division ; the sign was plain, the paint chipped and faded. No nonsense, like most CID agents I’d run into. The other was more ornate, the words US Army Judge Advocate General in bold letters over a gold pen and sword crossed above a laurel wreath. Lawyers liked that kind of thing. xa0xa0xa0xa0 The driver switched off the engine. I waited for them to say something, but they both sat there, as silent as ever. I had no idea what to expect, no reason I could think of to have been rousted out of bed at dawn and driven here. From their expressions, the MPs didn’t know much, either. They had one advantage over me; they didn’t care. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “It’s been great, fellas,” I said. “See you around.” I got one leg out of the jeep before they both grabbed me. I figured it was worth a shot, if only to rile them. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Try that again, and I’ll handcuff you to the steering wheel,” the driver said. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “He speaks!” I said, turning to the sergeant behind me. He almost cracked a smile. Thought about it, anyway. “So, guys, spill, will ya? What’s the deal? What are we doing here?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Hold yer horses,” he said, almost friendly now that the journey was over. For him, at least. “We’re waiting for a guy.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Who?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Some colonel,” he said, consulting his orders. “Colonel Samuel Harding. Anyone you know?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Yeah,” I said. A figure emerged from the Quonset hut. “That’s him.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 I had no trouble spotting Harding. I’d worked for him since I landed in England back in ’42, a shavetail second louie with vomit on his shoes after a trans-Atlantic f light in a B-17. Fortunately his opinion of me had improved some since those early days, and I was sure he’d straighten things out. Maybe he’d had me brought here for that very purpose. xa0xa0xa0xa0 I breathed a sigh of relief as I held up manacled hands and gave my best impression of a nonchalant grin. “What gives, colonel?” In the circumstances, I thought it best not to call him Sam. xa0xa0xa0xa0 A new MP approached the jeep and took hold of my arm. It was a practiced cop’s clasp, a firm grip that let me know who was in control. A couple of GIs walking by stopped to gawk. A uniformed agent followed Harding out of the hut, the agent’s shoulder brassard, lack of any rank insignia, and stocky build all advertising CID. A couple of other guys in Class As headed in, giving me nervous glances as if I might leap from the jeep and assault them. Their nerves, spectacles, and briefcases said JAG. xa0xa0xa0xa0 We were drawing quite a crowd, and I was having trouble keeping up the grin. Harding strode to the jeep, the CID agent one step behind. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Take the cuffs off,” Harding said to the MP in the jeep, who quickly obliged. The new MP pulled me out of the seat as I was rubbing my wrists to get the circulation going. Harding was giving me a grim stare, but I still felt relieved to be out of handcuffs. I figured it was time to act military, so I gave the colonel a snappy salute. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Captain William Boyle,” he said, returning the salute as if it irritated him, “you have been brought here to face a general courtmartial regarding willful violation of the Articles of War. These men will escort you in to meet with your counsel.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “You’re joking, aren’t you? Sir?” I felt like Alice falling down the rabbit hole, finding myself in a place where nothing made sense. I looked around for someone to come to my rescue, but there was no one but Harding, his unwavering stare, the strong-arm men, and a gathering crowd. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “This is no joke, captain. Serious charges have been brought against you, and given the gravity of the situation, it has been decided at the highest level to expedite the proceedings. You have one hour. I suggest you use it wisely.” With that, he about-faced, leaving me with a stone-faced MP who made me miss the company of my two surly companions, and a CID agent who grabbed my other arm even tighter, smiling as he pulled me along. xa0xa0xa0xa0 I was going to ask what the hell was happening, but the CID guy looked like he enjoyed hauling in a captain too much to be bothered. Besides, something crazy was going on, and I knew I wouldn’t get a straight answer from anyone if Sam Harding himself was pulling the wool over my eyes. So I zipped it as they dragged me down a narrow hall and let them shove me into a space that was more like a closet with aspirations to be an office. It had a metal table bolted to the floor and two folding chairs. I sat with my hands folded on the table, the feel of cold steel around my wrists still hard to shake. xa0xa0xa0xa0 I was in big trouble. And I had no idea why. xa0xa0xa0xa0 Ten minutes later, a skinny kid entered the room and took the other chair. His uniform jacket was too big for him, or he was too shrimpy for Uncle Sam’s smallest size; it was hard to tell. He wore a second lieutenant’s bars and the JAG gold pen and sword. “So you’re the guy everyone’s talking about.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “You left something out,” I said. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “What?” He went wide-eyed as he opened his briefcase, glancing inside as if whatever he forgot was in there. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Three things, actually. Two sirs and the fact you should still be standing at attention. As far as officers go, kid, you’re the lowest of the low. Didn’t they teach you anything in basic?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “No,” he said, pushing his chair back to stand. His briefcase tumbled to the floor, and a mass of papers spilled out. He knelt to retrieve them, thought better of it, and knocked over the metal chair as he tried to imitate attention. “I mean, I didn’t go to basic training. Sir. We had an accelerated officer’s training course, then a few weeks at JAG school, and here I am. Sir. Sorry.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Good. Two sirs , and you’re at a semblance of attention. Now gather your papers and tell my defense counsel I’m tired of waiting.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Captain Boyle, sir, I am your defense counsel. Peter Scott. Lieutenant Scott. Sir.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Jesus, sit down, Scott, you’re making me nervous. You’re it, really?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Yes, sir, I am,” he said, placing the paperwork on the table and organizing the sheets. It looked like it calmed him. “I’ve been reviewing the charges, and I have to say this is serious.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Yeah, the handcuffs and the MPs kinda gave me that idea already, Scott. What am I accused of?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “You don’t know?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “How the hell would I know?” I was so steamed I forgot to bawl him out for missing a sir again. xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “I mean, usually they tell you ahead of time. I think.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “You think? You’re JAG; you should know. What kind of lawyer are you anyway, Scott?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Real estate,” he said in a low voice. “Sir. Or at least that was what I was planning on. Joining my father’s firm, I mean.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “It was a rhetorical question, Scott. I don’t give a damn about your civilian life. They taught you rhetoric in law school, didn’t they?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Yes, they did. I was captain of the debate team.” Obviously the concept of rhetorical questions still eluded him. I studied his face, and he blinked nervously as I leaned forward. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Hang on. You were planning on joining your father’s firm? So you never actually practiced law?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Well, no, not exactly.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “How long have you been in the army, Scott?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Three months, sir.” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Officer’s training, JAG school, transport over here—that doesn’t leave much time for court-martial experience, does it?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Well, no. As a matter of fact, I arrived from the States last week. This is my first case.” He smiled as if I should be honored. xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Scott, be a good kid and go get Colonel Harding, will ya?” xa0xa0xa0xa0 “No, sir. He instructed me not to let anyone see you. He sounded like he meant it. No, sir.” His eyes were like saucers as he shook his head a couple of times more than he needed to. He was scared, which told me the word had in fact come direct from Sam Harding. xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 “Okay,” I said, glancing at my watch. “We’re wasting time. Tell me about these charges.” --This text refers to the paperback edition. Praise for Blue Madonna "A non-stop action story that adds in the goldenxa0nugget of a really cool history lesson." —Suspense Magazine "Benn's 11th Billy Boyle mystery has snappy dialogue, satisfying action scenes, and much interesting history about D-Day." —Kirkus Reviews "This is a thoroughly entertaining, well-told war adventure, and since the book ends on June 5, 1944, we know there's much more to come." —Booklist "The suspenseful story line, set on the eve of the Normandy invasion in 1944, will keep readers turning the pages... Benn movingly depicts Nazi cruelties that Boyle and his comrades witness." —Publishers Weekly Praise for the Billy Boyle series “Terrific . . . Razor sharp.” —Joseph Finder “Full of action, humor and heart.” —Louise Penny “Billy Boyle gets better and better. This is a must-read series.” —Lee Child “Spirited wartime storytelling.” —The New York Times Book Review “A fast-paced saga set in a period when the fate of civilization still hangs in the balance.” — The Wall Street Journal “A complex tale that maps the human cost of warfare in the South Pacific—and delivers a deft portrait of a young Jack Kennedy struggling to recover from the losses of PT-109. Poignant and riveting.” —Francine Mathews, author of JACK1939 "Cleverly told . . . the book weaves fascinating military facts with obscure historical details about the islands and native life." — The Arizona Republic "One of Mr. Benn's best books of the series . . . A pleasure to read." —Seattle Post-Intelligencer "[An] excellent eighth Billy Boyle whodunit . . . The superior plot and thoughtful presentation of institutional racism directed against American soldiers about to risk their lives for their country make this one of Benn’s best." — Publishers Weekly , Starred Review --This text refers to the paperback edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Billy Boyle, World War II US Army detective and ex-Boston cop, faces his toughest investigation yet: infiltrating enemy lines in France as the Allies invade Normandy.
  • May 1944: Captain Billy Boyle is convicted on spurious charges of black market dealings stripped of his officer’s rank, reduced to private, and sentenced to three months’ hard labor. But Billy is given an opportunity: if he takes on the incredibly dangerous mission of investigating a set of murders at the Allies’ safe house in the French town of Chaumont, he can avoid his punishment. Parachuted in as part of a three-man team the night before the Normandy invasion, he has very little time to find the killer’s identity and lead a group escape back to England, with a whole army of foes nipping at his heels.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(337)
★★★★
25%
(140)
★★★
15%
(84)
★★
7%
(39)
-7%
(-39)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Billy Boyle comes through again!

Once again James Benn provides the reader with an exciting novel packed with information that you probably didn't know about WWII. Not everyone depicted in this series is honorable and duty bound. They are real people existing in very terrifying
situations. The author shows us how some people take advantage of situations for their on financial advantage without concern of those around them. Although, others in similar circumstances perform admirably and unselfishly . I look forward to Billy's next adventure. Please keep them coming Mr. Benn!
3 people found this helpful
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A Thriller...But More. Thoughtful; Fine, Even Writing From Book to Book

Eleven books produced at this level of writing and research is a great accomplishment. I concentrate on the books set in World War II in the European Theater of Operations. Aside from plenty of suspense and action, each novel offers something more: this one deals with the historical impact of Black Marketeering in Britain and France on the flow of supplies to GIs fighting on the ground. An earlier, hard-hitting novel has a subtext of how American Racism played out among patriotic American Negro troops training hard for D-Day. Throughout, Billy Boyle, a former murder squad detective from Boston, has cause to reflect on the nature of criminals and of criminal behavior wherever he finds it. In the US Army, he learns about the pressures of combat and the corrosive effects of greed on individuals. He sees self-sacrifice and atrocity as well as betrayal and brutality. Yes, Benn is entertaining...but Benn is also enriching a reader's understanding of human nature and of the human experience. While several of his continuing characters have 'love interests', they have usually been kept well in check; not interfering with the plots. This one comes a bit close to violating that useful convention...but not so much so as to dock a star.
2 people found this helpful
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Another riveting tale in occupied France

The Billy Boyle author gets better and better with each book. The prose describes a story that is so real I listen in the dark for sounds of the enemy approaching through the forest. I live in the middle of a large urban area!! The characters are fully faceted and I long to meet them. Now another year will need to pass for the next book. I feel as if I have experienced a bit of WWll.
2 people found this helpful
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Another riveting tale in occupied France

The Billy Boyle author gets better and better with each book. The prose describes a story that is so real I listen in the dark for sounds of the enemy approaching through the forest. I live in the middle of a large urban area!! The characters are fully faceted and I long to meet them. Now another year will need to pass for the next book. I feel as if I have experienced a bit of WWll.
2 people found this helpful
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Our Hero BB is Demoted!!

Another thriller loaded with history...nearing the end of the war. Will Billy & Diana survive??? Living happily ever after, I hope!
1 people found this helpful
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billy boyle in france just prior to d day!!

reading this book completed all the series titles for me...looking forward to a new title to come out this fall. superb series for all WW2 history buffs!!
1 people found this helpful
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Fantastic!

I thought that I had finished the Billy Boyle series with The White Ghost, but was pleased to realize I still had two more books to read. The Blue Madonna was as good as any of the previous books, which means I thought it was great!
1 people found this helpful
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Absolutely riveting!!!

Terrific story, great writing. If you love historical fiction, especially WWI and WWII, this is a great series. I am amazed it is so hard to find all of the books.
1 people found this helpful
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Love Billy Boyle

Cracker Jack storytelling. Love Billy and his pals. Keep up the books, Mr. Benn. Best to read in order, but good if you read at random.
1 people found this helpful
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Welcome back, Billy and Kaz

Billy returns from the South Pacific just in time for D-Day. I had thought that these books had run their course. The last book, The White Ghost, pulled a neat trick to get Boyle into the Pacific Theater, but I was one of those who was not totally thrilled. I know a lot less about the war in that theater, and so learned more than usual. I finished the book, and it was fine, but it really didn't bring about the tension and excitement of the books set in Europe. I was surprised to find that with the return to Europe, the story became more interesting again. This was a very good story, although the notion that Billy would run into his English girlfriend behind enemy lines in Italy, North Africa and now France is beginning to strain even a fan's credulity. Overall, even though I hate books that end on cliffhangers, this was a return to where Billy belongs, evidently, and this is a very worthy continuation of one of the bretter series in the business.
1 people found this helpful