Love in a Time of War by Adrienne Chinn is a dual timeline historical saga, set in 1891 as well as before and during the WWI. It's a sweeping and dramatic novel, crammed with romance, emotion and heartache.
Young Christina is staying with her cousin in Capri, Italy, taking Italian lessons and exploring the countryside. She is carefree and artless, and falls head over heels with a dashing young aristocrat Harry Grenville.
Years later, we see her as a married mother of three, living in London. She is different from the young woman we encounter earlier.
The Fry sisters, Cecelia, Jessie and Etta, are coming of age in the pre-war London. They all have their dreams and hopes.
Celie is studying German and hopes to become a teacher one day. Her tutor, Max Fischer, believes she needs to have more confidence in herself.
Cecelia's mother thinks her studying German is a total waste to time. The father of the family, Gerald Fry, loves his daughters unconditionally and supports them all.
Mr Fry owns a photo studio, and Celie helps him to run it.
The Women's Suffrage is the cause Celie feels strongly about. She attends meetings and helps organise rallies around London and beyond.
When the war begins, the age of innocence comes to an end. Celia's love, Max, has to do the military service in Germany. All of a sudden their future seems to be doomed. They are on the opposite sides of the conflict.
Jessie is training as a nurse, while Etta is free to pursue her artistic studies. Jessie and Etta are quite stubborn, rash and ego-centric, in their own way.
While Jessie might have chosen a caring profession, she does it more out of ambition to see the world and not be confined to the role of the obedient wife and mother of the family.
Despite her mother's objections, Jessie becomes an army nurse. The adventures she craved become a horrifying reality, when she is posted to Gallipoli and Egypt.
Etta's bohemian aspirations bring her into the close circles of the Bloomsbury group.
Etta falls in love with an Italian artist, Carlo Marinetti, and elopes with him to Italy. She is expecting a baby, and writes deceptive letters to her family in London about their marriage.
Each sister undertakes a personal journey of self-discovery. Their mother Christina is anxious that her daughters do not repeat the mistakes of her youth. There are secrets she's been keeping from her family.
Christina seems to be unable to let the past go. It has affected her so much that her whole personality has changed. She is distant and aloof, and can't bring herself to love her firstborn, or her devoted husband.
There is a certain Chekhovian theme, of a conflict between illusions, dreams and reality, which could be traced through the storylines of all Fry women (mother and daughters). All the Fry ladies are educated and refined, but unlike the Chekhov's Three Sisters, Cecelia, Jessie and Etta are able to change their lives.
The portrayal of the war is unflinching and moving.
Set against the catastrophic and poignant historical backdrop, Love in a Time of War is a captivating exploration of the spirit of the women forging new lives during and after the WWI. Immersive and moving.
In the Acknowledgments, the author talks about her grandmother and other family members who became an inspiration for the characters of the Fry sisters. Adrienne Chinn says, she is proud to come from a stock of independent, self-reliant women.