'War on Peace' reveals how conflict rewires family roles. Breadwinners vanish, leaving elders to raise grandsons who later repeat the cycle. Siblings trade childhood rivalries for life-or-death decisions. The book avoids melodrama—it’s in clipped dialogue and unfinished letters that the anguish bleeds through. Families don’t 'get over it'; they adapt to a new normal where grief is a family member.
The author doesn’t shy from generational divides. Grandparents recount wars they survived, only to watch grandchildren relive the nightmare. Teenagers radicalized by conflict reject family values, while parents cling to outdated hopes. 'War on Peace' captures this tension in heated dinner-table arguments or silent car rides—where love clashes with incomprehension. It’s warfare at the kitchen table, with no medals awarded.
The book frames families as collateral damage in geopolitical games. Soldiers returning with trauma unknowingly pass it to their kids through hypervigilance or emotional distance. Wives become de facto single parents during deployments, scrambling to hold households together. 'War on Peace' especially gut-punches with scenes of children drawing tanks instead of trees, or flinching at fireworks. It’s the quiet moments—a mother memorizing her son’s face before he enlists, a daughter folding her father’s flag—that expose war’s true cost.
What struck me was how war dismantles family traditions. Holiday tables have empty chairs, bedtime stories turn into coded warnings, and trust erodes as informants infiltrate communities. 'War on Peace' shows families developing survival instincts—like teaching kids to identify landmines instead of riding bikes. The irony? These adaptations keep them alive but steal the very bonds they’re trying to protect. The book excels in showing this paradox through fragmented timelines and shifting perspectives.
'War on Peace' portrays the toll of conflict on families with raw intensity. It doesn't just focus on physical loss—deaths, injuries—but digs into the emotional erosion that lingers for generations. The book shows parents who become shells of themselves after losing children, siblings torn apart by differing loyalties, and children growing up too fast in war zones, their innocence shattered. These families carry invisible scars: PTSD, survivor's guilt, and a perpetual sense of instability.
One striking aspect is how economic devastation compounds the trauma. Jobs vanish, homes are destroyed, and families are displaced, forcing them into cycles of poverty that outlast the actual warfare. The narrative also highlights forced separations—refugee families split across borders, or members conscripted into militias. Love persists, but it's strained by constant fear and the need to prioritize survival over connection. The book makes it clear: war doesn't end when the fighting stops; it metastasizes into family dynamics, altering relationships forever.
2025-06-29 02:26:09
20
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
The Price of Peace: Book 3 In The No More Regrets Series
Shay Robinson
10
1.4K
The Price of Peace is the final showdown and book three for the No Regrets crew, where the masks come off and the bills finally come due. Shane O’Brien is done playing house. He’s been living his life like a "glorified roommate" with his wife, Isla, ever since she broke their vows with her best friend's husband, but now the cold war is turning hot. While Shane finds a temporary sanctuary with Maya Cruz, Isla is weaponizing their children trying to save a marriage that might already be lost, but will she realize this too late, or burn the whole house down. Speaking of Maya, she has a few secrets of her own, one that involves Mayor Rogers and a scandal that could level the city.
In the courtroom, Crandon Morgan is fighting to keep his name clean after a very public mental meltdown. He’s looking for a comeback, but he finds a distraction in Tempest Summers, a new law junior associate with a haunted past and a hunger for a kind of justice the law books don’t cover.
Meanwhile, Kole Michaels is trapped in a different kind of nightmare. A past mistake named Akeisha is using a legal loophole to pin a child named Urmagisty on him. With his relationship with a different Keisha on the line and his daughter Mabel watching, Kole has to prove he’s being set up before the lie becomes his life.
In this game, peace isn't free, you have to pay for it in blood, truth, or with everything you own.
I met Oleg in junior school, and we clicked right away. Despite our fathers being rival mafia bosses, we never fell apart. But my feelings for Oleg changed with age. I felt frightened because I was torn between the comforts of friendship and the thrill of something more.
My dad was very homophobic, so it was even more difficult to express how I felt. I was faced with wanting to be truthful but endangering our families’ fragile peace So, my feelings stayed hidden, and I was just happy to be with Oleg.
Yet I couldn’t help but hope that Oleg would feel the same. Perhaps he was too scared to say anything. That hint of hope was what gave me the courage to take action.
And I did but things went terribly wrong. our worlds collided and exploded. It left us with nothing but hatred and resentment between our families. If I could turn back time, I would be content with the friendship we once shared, not the hurt and anger which we now have.
We parted ways with hatred in our hearts,a wound that never healed,years later,our path crossed again......
Lila Carrington gets the most shocking news from her father at dinner one day, and all he said was a decree that she has to follow through with even though she has her own
reservations—she was supposed to tie the knot with Levi Beaumont. The Carrington and Beaumont families have been enemies for decades, and truthfully none of them know the real reason behind the fight because each person seems to have their own side to the story, so Lila did not understand the reason that her father, who taught her never to associate herself with the Beaumont family, was the same one pushing her into marriage with one of them.
Levi did not want the relationship either, but the families had to form an alliance so they could both remain in business. It had to be done. Driven with the passion to stay in business, Lila and Levi help their family out, but with the promise to their parents that it would only last a year and they would be done.
What happens when they begin to fall for each other?
Do the Carringtons and the Beaumonts reunite, or does a war happen?
Legacy of Love and War is a romance like you have never seen before.
On our wedding night, my husband didn't stay long enough to toast with champagne.
He left me alone at the reception and retreated to the chapel.
Because from the very beginning, this stoic, untouchable man had only ever loved my younger sister.
For three years of my marriage, I poured myself into thawing a heart of stone, only to be met with glacial silence.
"Claire," he said coldly, "I'd rather take vows of celibacy than ever love you."
But when the truck came barreling toward me, the man who had resented me his entire life used his own body to shield mine.
Just before I lost consciousness, I saw him gripping the paramedic's sleeve, blood staining his lips.
"Don't tell that crazy woman who saved her… And don't let my family… make things difficult for her."
Tears welled in my eyes. Only then did I realize I wasn't the only one at fault in this marriage.
After coming back to life, I chose to join the United Nations Peacekeeping Forces and head straight to the front lines.
If we were never meant to grow old together in this life, then let my final wish for him be this:
A lifetime of peace, and an eternity of never crossing paths with me again.
Ever heard the saying,
“There is no secret that won't seek the light.”
Nadia and Lyra are daughters born from the illicit affair between Senator Gideon Powell and Elizabeth ginger. Life for these ladies changes when their father dies and they are thrown into the trenches. Their mother is killed leaving the two alone. In order to save herself, Lyra abandons her sister at a child prostitution home disguised as an orphanage and goes to America. Through countless scheming, she ends up married to billionaire Adam Vanhelsing. Years later, Nadia enters are sister's life to take revenge using one of her sister's stepson Justin Vanhelsing, but ends up falling in love with another stepson, Eric Vanhelsing.
Peace is lost. Tables are turned. Swords are drawn. Who will remain standing after the war? Will Love prove its power or would the Vanhelsings be destroyed?
Rose ends a passionate relationship when she discovers she and her lover share incompatible genotypes. She however visits the nightclub more often where an encounter with a billionaire, Austin George changes the course of her life.
A one-night stand leaves Rose pregnant, but instead of love, she’s met with Austin’s cold cruelty and a sinister plot to erase their unborn child. Believing his plan has succeeded, Austin vanishes, leaving Rose to face single motherhood alone.
Years later, Rose had suffered violent attacks, sexual assault and humiliation from Austin. Despite the challenges she faced, she raised her son, Tyler, who rose to fame as a music star. When Tyler publicly exposes the father who abandoned him in a song, Austin comes crashing back into their lives, demanding answers:
“Why didn’t you tell me he existed?”
Now, caught in a fierce legal battle over Tyler’s custody, Rose must confront the very man who once tried to destroy their child, in the process, shocking secrets surface.
'War on Peace' dives deep into the cost of diplomatic efforts in an era where military solutions often overshadow them. The book portrays sacrifice not just as a personal act but as a systemic erosion—career diplomats giving decades to fragile alliances, only to see them dismantled by abrupt policy shifts. Their sacrifices are quiet but monumental: strained family lives, perpetual relocation, and the emotional toll of negotiating in bad faith.
What struck me was how the narrative contrasts these individuals with the more visible sacrifices of soldiers. Diplomats rarely receive medals or public recognition, yet their failures or successes shape global stability. The book exposes how budget cuts and political sidelining force them to 'sacrifice' their profession’s integrity, often becoming facilitators of militarization rather than peacemakers. The theme isn’t just about loss; it’s about the invisible casualties of a world that no longer values patience over force.