Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Drops of Glass: A Tale of Magic in The Great War (The Shards of Lafayette Book 1) by Kenneth A Baldwin; Magic Combines With Historical Warfare


 Drops of Glass: A Tale of Magic in The Great War (The Shards of Lafayette Book 1)  by Kenneth A Baldwin; Magic Combines With Historical Warfare 

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews



This book can be obtained through Voracious Readers Only.


Spoilers: Kenneth A. Baldwin’s  novel, Drops of Glass: The Shards of Lafayette mixes 20th Century History with Fantasy by creating an Alternate Universe in which the deciding factors in World War I are not stronger weapons, aerial battles, mustard gas, the breakdown of relations between countries, or even a global pandemic. Instead it is magic, yes magical forces that attack indiscriminately with no allegiance to any flag or country and gain an upper hand towards their human mortal adversaries. 


Marcus Dewar is an American pilot with a less than stellar kill count, In fact he hasn’t killed anyone in the air or anywhere else. Instead, he sheepishly returns to get his plane fixed by his mechanic/girlfriend, Jane Turner and face derision and bullying from his fellow pilots. His most recent air battle was odd to say the least. His gun jammed as he tried to fight a mysterious blue aircraft. He and Jane are called into a secret meeting with various pilots, captains, and mechanics from Britain, France, the U.S., and Germany. This attack that Marcus witnessed was not the first of its kind. Many pilots had the same story: They faced unmarked blue planes that came from nowhere and after shooting the pilot seemed to disappear into nowhere. The pilots’ guns jammed, the plane crashed, and the pilots died. As said before, these mysterious planes attack anyone in the air and appear not to belong to any specific government. They also attack pilots of different levels of experience. In fact, one of the pilots that was shot down by these mysterious pilots was Manfred Von Richtoven, AKA The Red Baron. Even more sinister, certain objects left behind by the pilots are infused by a powerful magical psychic energy that defies all explanation. This secret mission relies on Marcus, who was an eyewitness to the events, and Jane, who comes from a magical family, to investigate into dangerous circumstances to find what this aircraft is and where it comes from. 


Drops of Glass is a brilliant piece that captures the history of WWI and the fantastic elements of a magical power that is untapped and misunderstood by those who bear witness to it. The book is full of wartime imagery and soldier mentality. These once beautiful countrysides and the skies above are filled with trenches, landmines, smoke, gas, and the numerous corpses. It takes a long time for these countries to recover and, as we know from history, some never do, leading to future problems that will be reignited about 20 years down the line. 


Marcus and Jane go on a dangerous mission into Belgium to locate the Blue Planes and to learn more information. They are unable to tell whether the people that they talk to are friend or enemy until proper code phrases and signals are recognized. One thing is clear: the villagers are on their guard, frightened, tense, and under a great deal of stress because of the war that is literally at their front door and they have had to adapt to survive. 


Even Marcus and Jane are transformed by their proximity to the war, Marcus is under the impression that because he hasn’t killed anyone, that he is a failure. Jane however knows the truth: Marcus hasn’t killed anyone because he doesn’t want to. He talks a good game about the glory of war and patriotism, but when it comes down to it he is too moral and ethical to be up there. However what Jane sees as honor, Marcus sees as a coward. Even though she is against killing,and mostly signed up because of the opportunity that she as a woman would get and to keep Marcus safe, Jane also understands Marcus’ desire to be a hero. In his mind, a hero has to shed blood.


Marcus and Jane’s mindset is substantially altered throughout the course of the book when Marcus is in the pilot seat and Jane has to act as a gunner. For the first time, she understands the soldier mentality of kill or be killed. When Marcus sees what his strong willed once peaceful girlfriend was forced to become, he looks at that propaganda and heroification in a less positive light. The war doesn’t make soldiers heroes. It just makes them killers. 


The human element of Drops of Glass is powerful, but just as powerful is the presence of magic, particularly the Blue Planes and their enigmatic Pilots.

They come on like a force of nature that can’t be controlled or contained. In a world that is made up of dividing loyalties and borders, the fact that these beings kill anyone is alien to those who experience it. Their flight strategies are all over the place and purposely mirror the human pilots  almost mocking them with their own tactics. If they can’t be defined or identified, then they can’t be understood or stopped. 


What is particularly sinister is that throughout the course of this book, the Blue Pilots are a mystery. No one, even the Reader, fully learns who or what they are. Theories are presented but just as quickly dismissed. A Blue Pilot is apprehended but purposely leaves little solid information about its identity or even its species. They come in, attack, and leave without any corroborating clues. The few clues they do leave like a pair of goggles and a scarf with magical energy leave more riddles than answers. 


In fact, the means of attack and the warfare setting suggests that something even more sinister is afoot, something that the Reader is all too familiar with even if the characters are not. The Blue Planes and their Pilots are treated almost like highly intelligent evolved species that cause great damage to various armies, and aren’t above harming civilians or whole villages to pursue their goals: whatever those goals are. It sounds almost like weapons from more recent wars than WWI doesn’t it? Like nuclear bombs, drone airstrikes, massive military vehicles, or smart bombs, maybe even AI that is programmed specifically to fight? 


The Blue Planes could be a metaphor for weapons, warfare, and energy that humans don’t understand yet want to possess. They produce a power that can control, dominate, and destroy. It wouldn’t surprise me if in later volumes that the enemy armies get over their fear of these Blue Planes and try to recruit and control them to strike against their enemies. The Blue Planes and Pilots could be a metaphor for war itself by killing indiscriminately and

does not care who is on whose side. Everyone eventually ends up dead. 


Drops of Glass is an Action/Adventure that delivers excitement and suspense, a Fantasy that brings interesting possibilities, but also presents a meditation on the real meaning of war,  violence, power, and death and what can be gained and especially lost by them.

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