The second book in this trilogy follows Private Theo Trickey through his time with the Paras in Africa and his stints as an SOE operative and a partisan leader through the middle years of the war. The boy certainly gets about a bit. Intercut with that, we get the story of Dr Daniel Garland, the military medical officer looking after Trickey in a camp in Germany during the final months of the war.
This book has the same action-packed sequences as the first one, with soldiers in the thick of battle and in dire straits. Trickey also uncovers some information about his father and has time to find a bit of romance. And along the way, we get more detail about his connection with Rommel and, by extension, Garland's dealings with the Rommel family in Germany.
The first book in the series was better, but that might be because I'm more familiar with the campaigns in Europe than those in North Africa. Once again, the battle scenes are well handled, crackling off the page. And both Theo and Daniel are good characters to take you through the story.
Some of Trickey's adventures in particular stretch credulity somewhat - he goes everywhere and does a bit of everything - but he isn't your average squaddie, with his South Tyrolean background, fluency in multiple languages and his Para training. Even with a slight suspension of disbelief, I care enough about these characters to want to know what happens to them next.