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Reviews for 1970S Honorbound

 1970S Honorbound magazine reviews

The average rating for 1970S Honorbound based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-08-12 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Bryan Laughner
Excellent story of two people on opposite sides of a very emotional issue and how love can bridge that gap. Johnny has spent the last two years in Vietnam as a Marine. He has returned to a country that shows no respect for the job he has done. Just the opposite - he's called names, he's attacked, and he's discriminated against for jobs. Carrie has spent that same amount of time as a political activist, protesting against the war. The day Johnny arrived home he saw Carrie at one of her protests on the college campus, noticed the pretty blond with the green eyes, and heard her refer to "soulless shells of men who came back to us, brutal and morally destitute, ruined as human beings." And he suddenly felt more than he'd felt in the jungle because he was home. Johnny went to stay with his sister until he could get a job, and discovered that jobs for vets were almost impossible to find. In spite of his business degree, he was only being offered low paying manual labor jobs, and told to grow his hair and leave his service off his applications if he wanted a better job, something he's not willing to do. His sister knows the local high school principal who is looking for a football coach, and suggests Johnny see him. So Johnny ends up taking the coaching job until he can figure out what to do. Carrie is a high school history teacher who has spent the last several years working to protest the war. Her fiance had been in the army and was sent to Vietnam, where he ended up taking his own life. Shortly after that her brother was drafted, but after training and before he was sent to Vietnam, fled to Canada. Now she's working to get people like that pardoned so that they can come home. Both Carrie and Johnny are working at the same high school. Their first meeting is rather acrimonious as neither can really see past their own viewpoints. But as they are thrown into each others company more often, they begin to talk. Carrie begins to see the man behind the uniform and gets to know him and what makes him tick. Johnny finds out about the fiance that Carrie lost, and the anger and betrayal that motivates her. Later he also learns about her brother. As they talk, they also discover an attraction that is drawing them even closer together. That doesn't mean that things go smoothly for them. Johnny has his job with the football team, but it isn't an easy one. His assistant is prejudiced against military and the blacks that go to the school and has no problem showing it. One of his best players is a black kid who almost flunked out, but football is giving him the discipline he needs, if Johnny can just keep him on the team. The player is attacked by a white player, but the principal only punishes the black one, creating tension among all the players on the team and the students in the school. Johnny and Carrie work together to try to fix the problems, but it isn't easy or completely successful. While Johnny is good a being the coach and being a role model for his team, he's not completely happy at it. Carrie is having problems of her own. Her family has been torn apart because of her brother's actions. Their father, a vet himself, has disowned his son because of what he did and refuses to even speak of him. Her mother misses him and is caught between her husband and her son. When she has a heart attack, Brian comes in from Canada even though he knows that he could be caught and arrested. This also puts stress on the relationship between Carrie and Johnny because of Johnny's feelings about Brian's desertion. There's a great scene where Johnny and Brian sit down together and actually talk about their views and feelings and find that they have more in common than either would have believed. By the time Thanksgiving comes Johnny has finally started to think about his future and what he really wants. He remembers how he had wanted to be a Marine since he was a little kid. He also remembers the comradeship among his fellow Marines, and how much he liked the job he was doing when he wasn't dealing with the problems created by those running the war. And he began to wonder just why he left the Marines when he came back and think about going back in. This creates a problem with Carrie, because she can't see how she and Johnny can be together with their two different outlooks. Things got very emotional once Johnny made his decision. I liked seeing how things went after that, and how the final resolution was not an easy fix but something that had to be worked for. I loved the realism showed of the attitudes of the time, both towards the veterans and toward the African Americans that attended the school. I could feel Johnny and Carrie's frustration as they tried to help a deserving student only to be blocked by other people's prejudices. I also enjoyed the inclusion of some of the political turmoil of the time and how it influenced and affected Carrie and Johnny's actions.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-12-25 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Floyd Allen
Pleasant, contemporary, reunion romance, originally published in 1990 by Harlequin American When Luke and Jenny first met seven years before, he was in a very difficult place, and Jenny�s emotional support was invaluable to him. Unfortunately, soon after he regained his footing, Jenny broke his heart when she disappeared. In the intervening years, Luke has not once seen or heard from Jenny, until the day she suddenly reappears in his life. He is shocked at the major changes in her. She is no longer the sunny optimist he used to know. In fact, she seems to be struggling emotionally as much he was in the past, and he is determined to offer her the same helping hand she extended to him. He very much hopes that if the two of them spend a weekend together at a friend�s beach house, it will provide Jenny with a chance to heal her wounds and, most of all, for the two of them to rediscover the love that they lost. Ms. Arnold is an excellent, award-winning writer, who is very skilled in general at writing a classic, dual-point-of-view, HEA romance. This story is told in two parts, the past relationship of the romantic protagonists, and their reunion in the present. This format is a bit cumbersome, and the story is inevitably a bit dated, given the fact that this novel is 30 years old. But it is quite refreshing that there is no foul language, and there are no crude sex scenes to wade through. Overall, this is an enjoyable, non-melodramatic, comfort read. I rate this story as follows: Heroine: 4 stars Hero: 3 stars Romance Plot: 4 stars Beach Setting: 4 stars Writing: 4 stars Overall: 4 stars


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