“There’s nothing to fear in life but fear itself.”
Two women. Two crimes. Two Fates. One house.
On publication day, I read a review of Coming To Find You by Jane Corry and immediately skipped to my computer and requested a review copy. I wasn’t expecting the lovely folks at Penguin Random House Canada to grant my late request, so I was surprised when less than 24h later, the ARC appeared on my Kindle. I’d never heard of the author before. I’d never seen the book reviewed before. This shows the power of word of mouth!
Am I ever glad I took a chance!
This is a SPECTACULAR blend of historical fiction and psychological suspense! I binge-read it today. I want to grab a megaphone and encourage everyone I meet today to pick up this book.
Elizabeth Montague runs a boarding house, Tall Chimneys, in Sidmouth, a coastal Devonshire town when she’s reluctantly recruited into Churchill’s Secret Army.
Eighty years later, Nancy Greenfield, takes refuge in the same house on Cliff Road when her stepbrother is sent to prison. Not only is Nancy living ‘the silent sentence of shame’ but she’s also on the run, hounded by the press who claim that Nancy knows more than she’s letting on. Can Elizabeth’s wartime secrets help Nancy survive?
“I honestly don’t know which one is the real me.”
I LOVED the unreliable narrators. I didn’t know who to trust. The secrets just kept piling up and balanced the fascinating historical fiction timeline perfectly. I appreciated the reminder that people aren’t always what you think they are, that there are some things that can’t be told to anyone, and that none of us know what someone is capable of. Including ourselves. Corry highlights the wartime thought that people didn’t know what the future held, so they grabbed opportunities that they normally wouldn’t have so rashly taken and reminds us that nobody was the same after the wartime experience.
I was excited to learn about carriers of a Fairbairn-Sykes knife, HMP Knockton, why there were no station announcements or signs on train travel during the war, and about dead letter boxes. I was driven to Google ‘conchie’ and ‘grockle’ and was excited to discover ‘why’ I clean when I’m stressed.
Corry has given me lots to consider - especially the concept of emotional footprints that we leave behind in houses.
Is the history of Tall Chimneys best left in the past? You’ll have to decide for yourself.
I was gifted this copy by Penguin Random House Canada, Doubleday Canada and NetGalley and was under no obligation to provide a review.