Jackie French, The Whisperer's War, Harlequin Australia, HQ (Fiction, Non Fiction, YA) & MIRA, March 2025.
Thank you, NetGalley, for providing me with this uncorrected proof for review.
The Whisperer’s War begins with revelations that, while startling, are demonstrated to be a possible scenario as the supporting material at the end of the book suggests. What is even more important is the underlying philosophy that gives the claims gravitas. Jackie French is writing about more than World War 2 as it was experienced in Britian, and in less detail, in Australia. She bravely puts class, race, the environment, the causes of war and the secrets that are endemic, with cruelty a predominant feature as the foundation to that secrecy, at the forefront of her novel. At the same time, she introduces engaging characters, a storyline that goes beyond the allied victory, and a pleasing, but with complexities intact, resolution.
Lady Deanna of Claverton Castle is a spy, providing information about fascist sympathisers for British intelligence. She is also an inveterate farmer of potatoes, enmeshed in digging manure and doing her best to avoid becoming a recipient of child evacuees. When she cannot evade the three homeless, voiceless sisters who emerge as leftovers after the careful planning and housing of all the other children, Deanna takes them home. Thus, she begins a life coming to terms with the mystery of the girls’ identities and past, the secrecy that she must continue to assume, the mystery around an Australian pilot, Sam, whom they befriend, and the return of her cousin and his clandestine activities.
Alongside the endeavours of war, the eagles sail above Claverton castle, the undulating landscape provides pleasure, and Deanna reflects upon her dream that describes another landscape, one to which she is drawn as she is to Sam. The war scenes of Coventry and London, and those the girls experience are horribly realistic, the alternatives to war as a response making sympathetic reading. However, the realities of fascists’ peace plans are also openly questioned. Like their responses to experiences after the war ends, Deanna and the girls provide so much to consider. French cleverly does not allow these thoughts overtake her story.
Once again, Jackie French has combined a strong story line, engaging characters and absorbing ideas to create a work that intrigues and inspires, while being a great read.