4.5 Stars
"NOTICE PINNED TO THE CHILBURY VILLAGE HALL NOTICEBOARD,
SUNDAY, 24TH MARCH, 1940
As all our male voices have gone to war, the village choir is to close following Cmdr. Edmund Winthrop’s funeral next Tuesday.
The Vicar
Tuesday, 26th March, 1940"
The Chilbury Ladies’ Choir, told through letters and journals, and “lists” of things, is a story set in a small village in England, as WWII ravaged the landscape, lives and changed an entire generation, and those that followed. A town with a few people trying to find ways to do what they can to improve life for their small corner of the world, whose enthusiasm is infectious and, to begin with, while their men are away fighting the war, decide to start an all-female choir – The Chilbury Ladies’ Choir. You wouldn’t think this would create such division, as though it were scandalous behavior.
There’s plenty of charm, and also plenty of reminders that there is a war going on. War is always present, in little reminders, in one of the characters thoughts or another’s actions.
”List of things to make note of before someone
leaves for war
The shapre of their body—the blank cutout
that will be left when they’re gone.
The way they move, the gait of their walk, the
speed at which they turn to look.
The crush of smells and scents that linger
only so long.
Their color, the radiance that veils everything
They do, including their death.”
There’s so much about this that makes it clear that it’s a story from another time, another place, and I loved that the things that characterized the time and place seemed so naturally to belong then and there.
There’s much about the haves vs the have-nots in this, as one wanders through these lives in this village, there are those who do not want, and there are those who know little else but want and need.
”The opulence of the room was dazzling, with the floor-length blue silk drapes, the majestic portraits of repulsive forebears, the porcelain statues, the antiquity, the inequity.”
War is hell, as the saying goes, places and people are damaged, destroyed, annihilated. So much devastation all around. One thing that brings light to these people are these women who have the courage to do things previously unheard of for women. Sing, yes, in an all-women choir, but it goes beyond that with so many men gone, the women have had to keep their town, their country running. And they learn a lot along the way about themselves. And as more courage is found, and more women are enjoying contributing their time and efforts, there’s another light growing stronger, bringing to light some deep, dark secrets, as well.
"Music takes us out of ourselves, away from our worries and tragedies, helps us look into a different world, a bigger picture."
So many of my friends loved this, and they wrote wonderful, very convincing reviews. I added this a while back, what seems like long ago, and have been waiting for my turn to read it since then! So glad I finally had a chance to read it, and so grateful to my goodreads friends, and goodreads for this forum to help determine which books to read.
Many thanks, once again, to the Public Library system, and the many Librarians that manage, organize and keep it running, for the loan of this book!