Reading this book is like enjoying a perfect cup of tea - you just can’t fully describe the flavors and feelings. I felt so many emotions that when I tried to jot them down, I found myself completely lost for words.
Back on September 1, 1939, at dawn, Fascist Germany broke the German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact and launched a massive air raid on Poland’s main airports. That sudden attack kicked off World War II, with Germany coming out on top by nearly wiping out the Polish air force (aside from a few planes that ended up in Romania).
With such devastation all around, it’s hard to imagine anything staying intact. Even London wasn’t spared from Hitler’s forces. And it’s during these turbulent times that the story unfolds.
Grace and her friend Viv head to London - the city they’d always dreamed of. By a twist of fate, Grace ends up working as a clerk at Primrose Hill Bookshop. Even though she wasn’t much of a reader at first, meeting pilot George and stumbling upon a copy of The Count of Monte Cristo sparks something in her, and soon she falls in love with books.
When the war breaks out, Viv and Colin decide to go to the front lines, while Grace squeezes in time at work to join the air raid wardens. Amidst flying bullets and falling bombs, books become her unexpected source of courage and strength. At Farringdon tube station, she even reads aloud to bring people together, offering a sense of unity and hope. Even when air raids and power cuts force everyone to sleep in the station, the stories in those books light a spark, helping them endure the darkest days of wartime London.
Madeleine Martin paints a vivid picture of how war changes everything. Home gardens turn into vegetable patches with makeshift air raid shelters; Hyde Park gets crisscrossed with trenches that look like open wounds; and after the bombings, walls crumble, exposing furniture that makes rooms look like a creepy dollhouse. These images really capture the pain the city went through, not just in its buildings but in the hearts of its people.
Men had to enlist to defend their homeland, and kids were sent off to the countryside, often ending up with strangers. All this silent suffering took a huge toll - living in constant fear and longing could easily break anyone.
Mrs. Weatherford, for example, loses her son Colin and transforms from a strong woman into someone frail and heartbroken, dreaming of joining him in the next air raid. Jimmy and his sister lose their parents, ending up as orphans scraping by day to day, and Mrs. Gideon is forced to send her child into foster care, tormented by the loss every minute.
War reduced people to walking shadows - alive, but completely drained of spirit and energy. That’s the most terrifying part: it destroys not just homes, but souls.
Amid all this chaos, reading becomes a little escape, a portable sanctuary. At first, Grace wasn’t into books at all, and she was even hesitant about working in a bookshop. But thanks to George and his love for reading, she starts to see books in a whole new light. Books let you live other people’s lives, see the world from different angles, and learn in ways you never imagined. We all have that empty space inside us, and for Grace - and for me - reading fills it.
It’s George’s words that help Grace rediscover the magic of reading, and thanks to The Count of Monte Cristo, she falls head over heels for it. She even begins putting together personalized book lists for customers, recommending the perfect reads for people like Mrs. Gideon, who’s still hurting from her loss.
All in all, it’s a truly beautiful story. I love it!
5 / 5 stars