This is an historical fiction page-turner, spanning twelve years between 1933-1945, the Great Depression, Recession, and WWII. The story takes place primarily in Toronto and Hong Kong, with descriptions of World War II battles, prisoner of war camps in Germany, Japan, and Ontario.
The beginning of the book feels a little like Romeo and Juliet. Two families, Ryan (Irish Protestant) and Dreyfus (Jewish), live across the street from each other in Toronto, at a time when antisemitism and pro-Nazi sentiment was high. The Dreyfus family owns a clothing factory and although the factory is still operating and providing work in the community, many stores are no longer buying from Jews (nor hiring, nor serving). Signs in shop windows state no [dogs or] Jews allowed, and there is a local chapter of aspiring Hitler Youth who bully and beat Jews. Molly Ryan and Hannah Dreyfus are best friends, Molly’s brothers are close friends and baseball buddies of Hanna’s older brother Max. Molly and Max are the star-crossed lovers. Although the parents are “friendly” a romantic relationship between Max and Molly is out of the question. Never-the-less, the young couple are drawn together like magnets, and their budding relationship leads to tragic consequences, and forced separation after the violent events of the Christie Pits Riot.
The book weaves several dramatic historical events, in particular the Christie Pits Riot and the Battle of Hong Kong, into an interesting novel of the period. The reenactment of the anti-semitic Christie Pits Riot in Toronto, following a less than sportsmanship-like baseball game, was frightening, but, the reenactment of the Battle of Hong Kong, the descriptions of the Japanese POW camps, and the Japanese massacre, murder, and rape at the St. Stephen’s hospital, was gruesome and horrifying.
Despite the title, this book is not epistolary, there are a few letters and the fact of those letters (and only much later, the content) partially drive the novel. After I got over the initial disappointment (epistolary is one of my favorite genres), I settled down to a really good read. Molly grew into a talented and principled newspaper reporter, who never completely got over her true love for Max. Max finished medical school, enlisted, and was deployed in Hong Kong where he performed valiantly under fire in the Battle of Hong Kong, after which he was captured and interned in a Japanese POW camp.
Both the Dreyfus and the Ryan family suffer great loss and redemption over the years until the end of the war. I recommend this book to lovers of historical romance fiction. This is not really my favorite genre, never-the-less I found this book to be a winner and I very much enjoyed the read.
Thank you NetGalley and Simon & Schuster Canada/Simon and Schuster for the opportunity to read an ARC of this book!