Love and friendship blossom when strangers are brought together by tragedy in this enchantingly captivating novel from multi-million copy seller and Sunday Times bestselling author Susan Sallis . Fans of Rosamunde Pilcher, Maeve Binchy and Fiona Valpy will not be disappointed.
'Susan Sallis has a natural touch' -- Woman's Realm 'Susan Sallis never disappoints' -- ***** Reader review 'Highly recommend this book' -- ***** Reader review 'A page-turner' -- ***** Reader review 'Could not put it down! -- ***** Reader review 'Don't miss this one' -- ***** Reader review ******************************************************** ONE JOURNEY THAT WILL CHANGE THE LIVES OF MANY FOREVER...
1951 : the 8.45 from Bristol to Paddington is preparing to leave.
Albert , the driver - whose father and grandfather before him worked on the railway - says goodbye to his wife with mixed feelings. Their seeming inability to have a child has overshadowed their happy marriage.
Jenny , clumsy but loveable, longs to make a success of her job in the restaurant car, where she attracts the interest of Marvin , the steward.
The passengers - some regulars on the line, others making a rare visit to London - settle down for the journey . Some talk and get to know each other, some while away the journey working or sleeping.
But as they near their destination, disaster strikes...
Susan Sallis was the author of over twenty bestselling novels, many of them set in the West Country. She was born in Gloucestershire and lived in Somerset with her family. She died in 2020.
This is the first time I have read this author, and to be honest It was hard going. It was an Amazon recommend, and the blurb sounded interesting. Basically this is in 3 parts. Part 1 before the disaster, Part 2 dealt with the disaster Part 3 after the disaster. It is set not long after WWII in 1951. Part deals is stories of the lives of the people who work on the train and some of the passengers. in the early chapter it describes some the passengers - who become 'The Story' The following chapters are mainly taken up by the life so far. 1 Chapter per person or couple. by the last chapter in this section I was lost to who was who. In the middle it was the disaster, as the blub says there was a disaster I am sure I am not spoiling anything to say the train crashed. It was in this section that part of the story became fantasy. The departure of the train was 8.45 am from Bristol on an April morning. A female survived the disaster, went to her meeting in London, they arranged for a car to take her home to Bristol after the meeting. She asked the driver when she got home if she would like to have a drink or something before she went back to London. The driver said no thanks as she wanted to get back before it got dark ! Remember this is 1951 therefore No Motorways and roads would not be the standard of today. I know traffic would be light. But the disaster took place at about 10 am. With everything that went on and what the female managed to do I am surprised that they made it back to Bristol in the light. Then the 3rd part, a few loose ends that we did not really know the outcome, some we did. I was pleased I did eventually manage to finish the book, a lot of pages I had to read 2 or 3 times to try to understand what is going on, sometimes I could not follow it.
What a glorious book. I really enjoyed reading about a varied group of people with insights into each one's personality and their very different lives and emotions. The build up was a gentle lead-in but shocking in its detailed tragedy. Once there, the reader thoroughly cared about each individual and anxiously awaited news of each person's fate. A winner in my opinion and highly recommended.
As an American, its a hard read to grasp England English lingo. I could only get through about 90 pages before I was over it. I wont rate it negatively because I didnt dislike the story line.