The Breaking Wave is one of Nevil Shute's most poignant and
psychologically suspenseful novels, set in the years just after World
War II.
Sidelined by a wartime injury, fighter pilot Alan Duncan reluctantly
returns to his parents' remote sheep station in Australia to take the
place of his brother Bill, who died a hero in the war. But his
homecoming is marred by the suicide of his parents' parlormaid, of whom
they were very fond. Alan soon realizes that the dead young woman is not
the person she pretended to be. Upon discovering that she had served in
the Royal Navy and participated along with his brother in the secret
build-up to the Normandy invasion, Alan sets out to piece together the
tragic events and the lonely burden of guilt that unravelled one woman's
life. In the process of finding the answer to the mystery, he realizes
how much he had in common with this woman he never knew and how "a war
can go on killing people long after it's all over."