When Jinny Hendrie’s love leaves Edinburgh to fight in the Second World War, she faces an uncertain future. Do even the darkest clouds have silver linings?
1937, Edinburgh. Attractive, dark-eyed Jinny Hendrie is happy enough in her job in the accounts office of a large bakery – until handsome Viennese cake expert Viktor Linden walks into her life with the promise of an exciting future. Although her father and her kind-hearted boss, Ross MacBain, warn against it, Jinny is determined to marry Viktor but, when war is declared between Great Britain and Germany, all her plans are in ruins. Austria has joined forces with Hitler; Viktor has become an enemy and must return home to fight.
Troubled years lie ahead without news of him, and while Jinny and Ross find new love, there are huge question marks over their future. When the war is over, will Viktor return? And if he does, will this lead to happiness . . . or heartbreak?
Could be a YA book, nothing objectionable in it. 3 sisters and a widowed father who wants them to live out their lives with him. Romance gets in the way, along comes WW2 and Dad learns things change. Never sure if the German or the Englishman gets #2 daughter, but all works out in the end.
One of those typical British weepers set during World War II with lots of period details (everyone goes to see Lost Horizon and drools over Ronald Coleman) and characters who are essentially made out of cardboard; as the back cover says our heroine, Jinny, falls in love first with a Viennese baker and then with her former boss but there's no real personality to any of them so why - or who she'll choose in the end - is left a mystery. My issue here is that one of our romantic leads, Viktor, is Austrian and when he went home, it was to serve in the German army. The author continually reminds us that he's Austrian as a way of making him less complicit, I guess, but... he left the UK to serve in the German army. I just feel like the near-total lack of emotional heft in this book didn't work given the complexity of the emotional issues the author was taking on.