Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a marvellous end to a wonderful series!, April 22, 2007
I am a huge Anne Perry fan, but even my high opinion of her writing was actually shaken to the foundations with this series. This is a wonderful series. All five books are masterpieces in their own right, and this book, which is the final one in the series did not disappoint me. In it we finally have an answer as to who "The Peacemaker" was. There is also another mystery in it, but this one, although a particularly brutal one, was an indication of how the world changed after the end of the First World War. This is a hearbreaking series, and totally riveting. I would not have missed it for the world, and I highly recommend it to anyone who can appreciate wonderful storytelling, as well as realistic characterizations. Ms. Perry's portrayal of how the world changed after this war is poignant and spell-binding.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Honor, loyalty, betrayal, heroism, good and evil on the large canvas of world war, May 29, 2007
With war finally coming to an end, leaving millions dead and the landscape of Europe forever changed, Anne Perry concludes her World War I spy/mystery saga. This five-book series paints the themes of honor, loyalty, betrayal, heroism, good and evil on the large canvas of world war, but it also develops storylines of daily life on the battlefields and at home.
It is now November 1918, years into a war that was only supposed to last months. And the war is coming to end. Members of the Reavley family --- Joseph, the army chaplain; his brother Matthew, the Secret Intelligence Service officer; and their sister Judith, the ambulance driver --- are together under dire circumstances as they strive to unmask the Peacemaker. They now have the means to find out exactly who he is and bring him to light. The Peacemaker has already cost them their parents, friends and others of importance to England.
A messenger dressed as a Swiss priest comes to see Matthew with news. They now have an ally against the Peacemaker in Germany. This man, Manfred von Schenckendorff, is willing to come across enemy lines to London and expose the Peacemaker to tell the Prime Minister. His own country will be betrayed by this decision, but he hopes his defection will help with the peace process. When Matthew is asked where Manfred should come through on the Western Front, Matthew sends him to Yrpes where Joseph is stationed. When Matthew tells Joseph what he knows, Joseph can hardly believe it and questions if it's true.
The Peacemaker has big plans for England, Germany and Europe. He has argued that the greater end justifies the smaller ugliness of his means. And he reminds the war reporter Mason of just that point when he visits. Mason takes this philosophy to mean that the Peacemaker had used means that he despised, which allows Mason to continue to sympathize with him.
Mason has been a supporter of the Peacemaker's plans because of the horrors they both experienced in the Boer War. Mason returns to the Western Front to report on the end of the war and renews his acquaintance with Judith Reavley. He has come to realize that the Peacemaker is an armchair warrior using other people's blood for his own purposes. In this case, the Peacemaker's plan is one of domination of the Western World by governments who believe as the Peacemaker does.
Meanwhile, Manfred arrives in Ypres with a bayonet injury to his foot. As Joseph and Matthew wait to take him to England, a nurse is murdered. She was a flirt and not well liked; anyone could have killed her. Was it a German prisoner? Or one of their own soldiers?
A civil policeman investigates, and the commanding officer requests Joseph's help. However, when Matthew is arrested for her murder, Joseph and Judith work together to find the real killer. In their race against time to get Manfred to London, they find evidence that frees Matthew --- only to have Manfred arrested. As they dig deeper, the private lives of the nurses and troops lead them to uncover the murderer.
With the murder solved, the three Reavleys, along with Manfred and now Mason, borrow an ambulance in order to catch a boat for London. Perils await them as they make the trip, but they arrive to see the Prime Minister. They have the necessary evidence, testimony and knowledge to identify and make their case against the Peacemaker.
Anne Perry has honored this time in history with her series. The struggles portrayed by the characters --- both those of impeccable character and those who are flawed --- are memorable. The overall series mystery of the Peacemaker's identity keeps readers on the edge of their chairs all the way to the end. The underlying tensions of a world at war bring to the audience an awareness of the costs of war, government decisions during chaotic times and the toll on humankind. WE SHALL NOT SLEEP (along with the entire series) will stay on this reviewer's shelf and is definitely worth a yearly read.
--- Reviewed by Jennifer McCord
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent end to the series, April 13, 2007
This latest series featuring the Reavley family during WWI, Anne Perry has taken us out of the comfort zone and into the trenches. Perry has always been great with detailing the world she writes, and we experience the horror not only of war, but the intrigue of the Reavley family as they untangle the mystery of the Peacemaker. Their family was torn apart when their parents were murdered enroute to London to give Matthew, their son in military intelligence, a treaty that would form an alliance with England and Germany, (forming a society whose freedom would be limited).
Joseph, the older son is a military chaplain, Matthew the intellegence officer, and Judith, the youngest, is an ambulance driver. (The other sister, Hannah stays home to take care of her children while her husband is in the Navy).
The Reavleys get a break when a German official sees that the Peacemaker needs to be brought down. Matthew comes to the front to get him, and they (the Reavelys) get involved in solving a nurse's murder. They have to go to London to take the German to Lloyd George, the PM, to end the conflict.
This book ties up all the series' loose ends. It is not action packed, but it does answer every question and characters' fates posed in the series, and that is very rewarding.
Still the beauty of Perry's words and the atmosphere she creates are the forefront of this book. Will miss the series, although look forward to the Monk and Pitt series again.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
"If ye break faith with us who die We shall not sleep, though poppies grow In Flanders fields." John McCrae
"WE SHALL NOT SLEEP" is the final novel in Anne Perry's ambitious 5 part WWI historical mystery series. This is a truly exceptional quintet.
Published 4 months ago by Jana L. Perskie
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5.0 out of 5 stars
and the first shall be last
I like all the detail. Perhaps some would find it sluggish, but I like the style and the "picture it paints".
Published 5 months ago by Meredith Hobbs Lund
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5.0 out of 5 stars
WWI Mystery
The four novels that make up this mystery story are intriguing in showing England during WW I -- an often ignored historic time of military technolology changes that some...
Published 8 months ago by Ava Taylor
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Riveting Conclusion
WE SHALL NOT SLEEP is the riveting conclusion to a fantastic World War I mystery series. The Reavley family saga keeps the reader's eyes glued to the page until the very last...
Published 9 months ago by Nash Black
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2.0 out of 5 stars
disappointed
I am a big Anne Perry fan. I really enjoyed the first book in this series. I felt, however, that each succeeding book was just more of the same: life in the trenches, Joseph...
Published 11 months ago by California dreamin'
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Bringing the series to a close in a myriad of conspiracies
Since last November, I've been reading Anne Perry's series of novels about the Reavley family and their involvement in World War One.
Published 15 months ago by Rebecca Huston
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Great series, rambling book...
I've been reading mostly mysteries and histories of WWI for a few years now. I was recommended to this series, and though I don't read Perry's other mysteries and haven't for many...
Published 21 months ago by K. L Sadler
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3.0 out of 5 stars
I did go to sleep
Anne Parry's series set in WWI began as an enthralling tale of murder and espionage. Unfortunately, there is only so much mud and blood one can absorb before interest lags and...
Published on August 23, 2007 by Bascom P. Doak
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5.0 out of 5 stars
We Shall Not Sleep
Anne Perry used all five books in this series to paint a multidimensional portait of the Reavely family. I mourn their parting.
Published on May 31, 2007 by B. Hernandez
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3.0 out of 5 stars
The End
And so it ends; the book, the series, the war. With some element of drama, this book was one of the better ones of the series.
Published on May 24, 2007 by Cindy J. Munson
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