Sunday, June 1, 2025

The Foxhole Victory Tour by Amy Lynn Green

Genre: Historical Fiction 
Publisher: Bethany House 
Released: January 23, 2024
370 pages
About the Book:

In World War II, worlds collide when performers across the United States unite to tour North Africa in a USO variety show.

Vibrant and scrappy Maggie McCleod tried not to get fired from her wartime orchestra, but she can't keep from speaking her mind, so an overseas adventure with the USO's camp show seems like the perfect fresh start. Wealthy and elegant Catherine Duquette signs with the USO to leave behind her restrictive life of privilege and to find out what happened to the handsome pilot whose letters mysteriously stopped arriving.

The two women are joined by an eclectic group of performers--a scheming blues singer, a veteran tap dancer, and a brooding magician--but the harmony among their troupe is shattered when their tour manager announces he will soon recommend one of them for a new job in the Hollywood spotlight. Each of the five members has a reason to want the contract, and they'll do whatever is necessary to get it. As their troupe travels closer to combat in Tunisia, personal crises and wartime dangers only intensify, until not only their careers but also their lives are on the line.


My Rating & Thoughts:    

3.5 rounded up to 4

Catherine plays the violin and Maggie the trumpet, both join three others to create a USO group who visit troops stationed in Africa. We follow them through this adventure and them discovering themselves and what they truly want to do with their lives. Cather is being pulled between her divorced parents and what they want. Maggie grew up as a Salvation Army pastor's kid and has always felt told that her music needs to be for the church. I enjoyed the interaction of the various characters in the USO group, each one felt unique. I really enjoyed the story at the beginning, but as it continued I found the pacing to become slow and dragging at times. I did enjoy the ending and what each character decided, but the felt like I didn't really get to connect with them the way I would have liked to.

(I borrowed this book from the library; opinions expressed 
in this review are my honest opinion and completely my own.)

Other books from this author that I have reviewed:   

   

  

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