This historical novel set during World War II in London is my second book of 2020, and all I can say is Wow! Luckily I started reading this on the weekend, and I finished it in two days! This is the type of book which called to me when life interrupted my reading time, and I couldn’t wait to return to London, 1940, and the challenges faced by Hazel, Nora, Marie, and Samantha. Now I am suffering from a book hangover...trying to decide which book is next on the agenda.
But back to the novel. The main characters are three women who meet in boarding school when they are 12 and 13 years old. Thrown together in a dorm room, they have completely different backgrounds. Nora is the child of high society and wealth, an atmosphere in which she is a complete misfit. Hazel comes from a dalliance between a woman of questionable background and an unknown father, and Marie has been exiled to England from Germany by parents house interest in their daughter was negligible. The three girls form an extremely close friendship, a friendship which would survive through adolescence and adulthood, and emerge triumphant despite the challenges of failed relationships, family crises, and war and separation. “We‘ll always be...just us three.” These simple words would prove to be the ties that bound these women together, as Hazel, a professional matchmaker, and Nora, a secretary/office manager in the country’s Home Office Air Raid Precautions Department, will stop at nothing to help Marie avoid internment as England launches a policy of classifying and interning expatriates from Germany, Austria, and Italy. The novel focuses on the early days of the war between England and Germany, as the officials and the public begin to panic, fearing the possibility of invasion by the enemy, and viewing with suspicion people from Germany who had moved to England in order to escape difficulties and challenges. Just as they had done during the First World War, the policy makers again instituted classification and internment of these people. Similar to the internment of the Japanese in the United States, most of these expatriates were innocent victims and loyal to their adopted countries.
The novel is divided into sections, each section focuses on one of the three main characters. There are also segments which take place in the present day as Marie’s granddaughter meets Nora and tries to piece together elements of the grandmother she did not know well. All of these elements are woven seamlessly into a riveting, absorbing and emotional story of the triumph of the human spirit, loyalty, and courage, as well as the strength and perseverance of strong women. This was a fantastic way to begin my reading life of 2020! Highly recommend this book to fans of historical fiction!