Officers and Gentlemen

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Officers and Gentlemen
AuthorEvelyn Waugh
LanguageEnglish
SeriesSword of Honour
GenreWar, satire
PublisherChapman & Hall
Publication date
1955
Pages187
Preceded byMen at Arms 
Followed byUnconditional Surrender 

Officers and Gentlemen is a 1955 novel by the British novelist Evelyn Waugh.

Sword of Honour trilogy

Officers and Gentlemen is the second novel in Waugh's

Men at Arms (1952), the third was Unconditional Surrender
(1961).

Plot summary

Sent back to the UK in disgrace at the end of the

Halberdier
who knows all the strings to pull.

Guy is posted to Cairo, Allied headquarters for the

Corporal-Major Ludovic. (Waugh may have based the character of Ludovic on one or two real people: the soldier of fortune and novelist John Lodwick,[1] and/or the future press tycoon and politician Robert Maxwell.[citation needed
]) In the final stages of the evacuation, they escape with a few others in a small boat, but run out of fuel. The sapper Captain in command becomes delirious, and subsequently disappears (there is an implication that he has been disposed of by Ludovic). Eventually they reach Egypt, where Ludovic carries a disoriented Guy ashore. Apparently a hero, Ludovic is commissioned as an officer.

As Guy recovers in hospital,

Mrs Stitch, a character who turns up in other Waugh books, takes him under her well-connected wing. She also tries to protect Claire, who was evacuated from Crete even though his unit's orders were to fight to the last and then surrender as prisoners of war
. She sends Guy the long way home to England, possibly to prevent him from compromising the cover story worked up to protect Claire from desertion charges.

Guy finds himself once more in his club, asking around for a suitable job.

Dramatisations

Officers and Gentlemen was dramatised for television in 1967 and 2001 along with the two other novels in the Sword of Honour trilogy, featuring first Edward Woodward and then Daniel Craig.

References

  1. ^ Geoffrey Elliott, A Forgotten Man: The Life and Death of John Lodwick (2018). London; Bloomsbury. p. 115.

External links