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Landfall: A Channel Story

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Originally published
  
1940

Adaptations
  
Landfall (1949)

3.8/5
Goodreads

Author
  
Nevil Shute

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Works by Nevil Shute
  
Lonely Road, The Rainbow and the R, Most Secret, An Old Captivity, Stephen Morris

Landfall: A Channel Story is a novel by Nevil Shute. It was first published in England in 1940 by Heinemann.

The story is set during the opening months of the Second World War and it concerns a young pilot, Roderick 'Jerry' Chambers, who is part of an air patrol unit guarding the southern coast of England – around Portsmouth. One day, Chambers sees a submarine and, believing it to be German, attacks with his weaponry and bombs. The submarine is sunk.

Back at the base, it is revealed that the sunken submarine was, in fact, a British vessel. Chambers escapes discipline but is censured and posted far away to the north of England. Meanwhile, by a curious chain of coincidences, his love interest, Mona Stevens (a local barmaid), discovers that the submarine was, in truth, a German vessel – it having previously attacked and sunk the missing British sub that Chambers was accused of sinking.

Chambers is offered a chance to redeem himself in a dangerous mission to test a new marine attack system. His plane explodes in mid-air but he survives, and manages to make his report. The novel ends with his transfer, as an instructor, to a pilot training school in Ontario with Mona, now his wife.

Adaptations

The novel was adapted to film in 1949. Landfall starred Michael Denison and was directed by Ken Annakin.

References

Landfall: A Channel Story Wikipedia