London 1962. Celia Duchesne works in a bookshop, she dreams of getting a better job, maybe as a secretary and leaving Southwark. The shop has recently been sold to Mrs. Denton, her new employer is busy settling in and Celia is left to her own devices. One day Septimus Nelson walks into the bookshop, he’s from America and his visits makes Celia’s job less boring. Around the same time Celia’s best friend Daphne discovers some information at the solicitors where she works about Celia and she stunned and wants to uncover all the hidden facts.
The London Bookshop Affair has a dual timeline, it’s told from the two main characters points of view and alternates from 1942 to 1962 and it’s extremely easy to follow.
France 1942. Anya Moreau is nineteen years old, she just been dropped into France and she’s a pianist or wireless transmitter and she sends messages to London. What Anya does is dangerous, she’s part of a circuit, her other contacts become her friends, Anya is betrayed by a person she trusted and she’s arrested by the Gestapo.
Celia and Anya are connected, Celia wants to find out the truth about what happened to Anya twenty years ago, it’s been hidden by her parents, bureaucracy and the secret services act. Septimus is very keen on Celia, she’s not sure if she’s ready for a romantic relationship, her life is complicated as it is and she doesn’t know what to do?
I received a copy of The London Bookshop Affair by Louise Fein from HarperCollins and Edelweiss in exchange for an honest review. Inspired by true events and people who were active during the Cold War, there was a real threat of a nuclear war starting between two superpower countries, American and the Soviet Union. England was America's ally and preparing to help, it was full of Soviet spies and Celia discovers this for herself.
A narrative full of twists and turns and it kept my interest from the beginning and the ending wasn’t at all predictable. The story is set in the 1960’s with the invention of TV and the Beatles and a time of social, political and cultural change. With a focus on the Cuban Missile Crisis, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament a British organization that opposed the development and use of nuclear weapons, Celia and Daphne are members, betrayal, injustice, secrets, mystery, intrigue, danger, courage, bravery, selflessness, forgiveness and empowered women.
Five stars from me, I enjoyed The London Bookshop Affair and the authors previous book Daughter of the Reich and I highly recommend both.