
Above: a cover painted by Ray Pease for Lucy Herndon Crockett’s 1954 novel The Magnificent Bastards, a war drama set in New Caledonia, dealing largely with a war widow’s hook-up with a colonel who degrades and mistreats her. It was well reviewed. David Dempsey of the New York Times wrote: I know of no novel to come out of the war that so honestly illuminates the relationship between men in combat and the women who are sent out to bolster their morale. This is a tragedy for which Red Cross coffee and doughnuts are no balm. Miss Crockett has caught its essence with honesty and compassion. Crockett was a Red Cross veteran, so when it came to war and human relations she knew what she was writing about. War novels are the least enticing type of books out there for us, so we won’t be reading this, but it sounds interesting.



































