The Recipient’s Son
A Novel of Honor
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- $3.99
Publisher Description
The Recipient’s Son is a coming-of-age story set at the US Naval Academy in the 1990s. By the author of Proximity, it tells the story of Donald Durago, a young man whose father was killed in the Vietnam War. For his heroic actions under fire, his father was a recipient of the Medal of Honor. His father’s heroism also provides Durago with an appointment to the US Naval Academy, since it is as a benefit offered to children of Medal of Honor recipients. However, his father’s legacy also carries with it the burden of being worthy of his bravery, honor, and sacrifice.
Durago struggles through his plebe year, and his poor performance leads to restriction over Christmas leave. During this time, Master Chief Strong helps the young midshipman learn to identify with his father’s sacrifice, his naval heritage, and the challenges of academy life. Under his guidance, Durago grows into a model midshipman.
In the spring of his senior year, however, he is accused of harassment. Concerned that he will be kicked out of the academy, Durago is forced to realize that he has not completely dealt with his father’s death, including nightmares of being a POW during times of stress. He leans on his roommate, James “Slim” Warren, and his budding relationship with JAG officer Lieutenant Junior Grade Jan Meyer.
The Recipient’s Son highlights all the major facets and phases of life at the US Naval Academy. Equally important, it forces the reader to consider questions about leadership, concepts of honor, and the balance between service and personal sacrifice. It is a story of a young naval officer’s coming to terms with his legacy as the son of a celebrated war hero.
The Recipient’s Son is a stirring tale of a young man coming to grips with the heroism of his father and overcoming his self-doubts to accept the challenge of serving his country on his own terms.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This disjointed and unpolished second novel by Annapolis graduate and former naval ordnance disposal technician Phillips (Proximity A Novel of the Navy's Elite Bomb Squad) focuses on the struggles of Donald Durango, the son of a Medal of Honor recipient following in his father's footsteps at the U.S. Naval Academy. Durango finds himself on the outs even before he's halfway through his first "plebe" year. Classes prove to be a breeze, but they offer little relief from the hazing-like indoctrination to military discipline that is everyday life at the academy, inflicted on him with particular cruelty by upperclassman Walter Simpson. Durango's greatest anguish through these episodes, however, is his deceased father's legacy. Learning for the first time how his father died during a performance probation, Durango is plunged deeper into doubt about whether the Navy is the place for him. Durango survives his first brush with expulsion. But as he advances at Annapolis, he finds himself up against another crisis, a career-ending charge of harassing a female plebe during a drill. The author paints a detailed picture of what midshipmen endure and how one young man tries to make peace with those traditions and the ghost of the father who he never knew in a novel that will appeal mainly to a graduate of, or those who aspire to enter, Annapolis.