At the Sign of the Sword: A Story of Love and War in Belgium by William Le Queux

(3 User reviews)   637
By Betty Young Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The Second Archive
Le Queux, William, 1864-1927 Le Queux, William, 1864-1927
English
Ever pick up a book that makes you feel like you’ve been thrown into a spy thriller? That’s *At the Sign of the Sword*. Set in World War I-era Belgium, it’s got it all: forbidden love, a brutal invasion, and a hero who might be in over his head. But here’s the kicker—there’s a secret code, a hidden weapon, and a mysterious organization pulling strings. The main character, a young fighter named Ian, has to navigate a world where everyone, including the woman he loves, seems to be hiding something. Le Queux doesn’t just tell a love story; he drags you through the mud, the ruins, and the brutal reality of war. And he does it with such energy that you can’t turn the pages fast enough. If you like stories where every character has a mask and the truth never pins where you think it will, this one’s for you. Even the history—like the real Siege of Antwerp—feels personal, all told in a modern and classic lilt. I could talk plot, but… just trust me. Grab this, a cup of coffee, and don’t plan on answering the door for the next few hours.
Share

Read "At the Sign of the Sword: A Story of Love and War in Belgium by William Le Queux" Online

This book is available in the public domain. Start reading the digital edition below.

Book Preview

A short preview of the book’s content is shown below to give you an idea of its style and themes.

This is a limited preview for informational purposes only. Download the full book to access the complete content.

This is a limited preview. Download the book to read the full content.

So, my latest adventure with William Le Queux had me gripping my Kindle like a rock. At the Sign of the Sword is an underrated treasure—but let’s start easy. If you love a plot that gets you sweating, you’re in for a treat.

The Story

The whole thing kicks off in pre-war England, where an idle gentleman named Ian De Thorne is more about leisure than globe-saving. But then the world blows up—literally. As soon as World War I begins, his entire life is knocked sideways. Aunt Alice? A mystery in a shawl. They ask—tell he thinks—him to travel to bad Belgium with a coded note for a contact in the spy ring. Sure, he starts off naive, but circumstances test him faster than you'd expect sweetheart double-crosses.

The setting flips from safe mansions to the heck-storm of refugee-packed roads and battle-ravaged cities. Right alongside Ian, you meet Rosalie (a love with her own fanged secrets), and lots of secret trials involving either gun powder or rose bouquets. Watching secrets flip inside dead men’s pockets as spies play tough pulls in suspense whether you jump. And just when you think you've solved the ‘sign’ reference… yeah, they sockpuppet warfare in London and abroad.

Why You Should Read It

Let me put it this way: I don't often find so many emotions stuffed in a war. This book doesn't let up. Where many male ‘adventure heroes’ are all done having reflections, Le Queux pulls Ian into serious arcs: Should I safeguard or revenge? He rarely cries, but it’s honest tough decisions right out, unlike stiff protagonists.

Now, was it written short after events in 1916? Ah, news-first intimacy shows every town, how propaganda tasters flare English cheer and Belgian despair—not sugar cold perspectives allowed yet wise echoes even now. Themes like guilt, trust, how loyalty shred hearts stay more about honesty of human tension.

Conspiracy, no: The author wrote both sides: British plain heroic vs truly brutal invaders so authentically brutal characters mouth—adds air-breathed stakes to the letter-crossing (I shouldn't spoil The Note part at all!). If you flipped and admired low politics boiling up later!

Final Verdict

Who’s this for? Hands down this a perfect fire-read for folks who keep early-1900s novels smooth—but demand twist-forwarders. Readers happy with classic knight-killers: set tension around history-buffs itching *not to start*, grittier see side burns into first-hand tensions across house rooms. Yes critics? Pacing hiccups, yes (1900 love rambles), but more sword twist the action flips whole scene worth hitting rewind. Books join secret code & vivid battles here instead scything shallow current reads offer.

If a book dared your trust most suspicious person next to—dive. No history textbook picks like blood-stain vivid like Sign of the Sword. Enthusiast path forward marked needed pleasure fresh echo genre.



📚 No Rights Reserved

This historical work is free of copyright protections. Enjoy reading and sharing without restrictions.

David Williams
5 months ago

The layout of the digital version made it easy to start immediately, the level of detail in the second half of the book is truly impressive. If you want to master this topic, start right here.

Barbara Jackson
5 months ago

This is now a staple reference in my professional collection.

James Thomas
1 week ago

The information is current and very relevant to today's needs.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (3 User reviews )

Add a Review

Your Rating *

Related eBooks