The Reading Bud

Book Blog by Heena Rathore-Pardeshi

Book Review: Christmas In Flanders Fields by Chris Waddington

Book Details:

Author: Chris Waddington
Release Date: 19 October 2025
Series:
Genre: Historical Fiction, WW1
Format: E-book 
Pages: 288 pages
Publisher: Coffee Shop Publishing (Self-Published)
Blurb:
I don’t know if I’m living longer or dying slower…
Armed with dreams of heroic victory and Lord Kitchener’s rally cry ringing in his ears, Jack Crosby proudly made his way to the front line. Once there, he quickly realised that there was no glory to be had on the blood-soaked fields of Flanders.
On the back of unrelenting German fury, December delivers a brutal Belgian winter…

Water pours in, swirling around Jack’s ankles, it meanders effortlessly through the trench, bringing with it the pungent stench of death. Body parts intermingle with rats and slushy mud, facilitating the inevitable spread of disease. Cutting a forlorn figure, Jack’s hardening heart aches for home, his beloved Rose and the idyllic life he now mourns.
But then, on Christmas Eve, dulcet German tones carried on the wings of angels float serenely through the gloriously placid night air…
Christmas in Flanders Fields is a poignant and moving depiction of the ungodly struggles encountered by decent men, too young to die. Set against the backdrop of the remarkable Christmas truce in 1914, It’s a story that encompasses love, hope, fear, bravery and the most unlikely friendships forged on the rugged plains of No-Mans-Land.

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Christmas in Flanders Fields by Chris Waddington is told through the reflective voice of British soldier Jack Crosby, immersing the reader in the muddy trenches of World War I, where brutality has become routine and hope feels like an act of rebellion. From its opening pages, the book establishes an unflinching realism where rats, corpses, fear, and exhaustion are rendered with lyrical restraint rather than sensationalism.

At its emotional core is the historical Christmas Truce of 1914, a fleeting moment when enemy soldiers laid down their weapons to sing, bury the dead, exchange gifts, and briefly remember their shared humanity. Author Waddington captures this event with remarkable tenderness. The scenes of candlelit trees rising from German trenches, carols drifting across no-man’s-land, and men shaking hands with those they had tried to kill only hours earlier are written with a sense of awe and disbelief that feels earned. The friendship between Jack and German soldier Wilhelm Becker becomes a powerful symbol of the fragile, fleeting nature of peace.

Equally affecting are Jack’s memories of home, particularly his love for Rose, whose letters and small gifts sustain him through despair. These quieter passages ground the novel emotionally, reminding us what war steals and what soldiers fight to preserve. The prose is evocative and reflective, often reading like a lament for lost innocence and squandered potential.

On the whole, Christmas in Flanders Fields by Chris Waddington is a poignant, immersive, and deeply emotional and moving tribute to a moment when compassion briefly triumphed over conflict. It is historical fiction at its most heartfelt. It is sobering, beautiful, and unforgettable.


You can also read this review at:

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I’m Heena

Welcome to The Reading Bud, my cosy corner of the internet dedicated to all things books and authors. Here, I invite you to join me on a journey of discovering under-represented books, independent and small press authors, and all things book with a touch of love and loud purrs. Let’s get Reading!

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