It was 1940 in London as the blitz was beginning, bombs were falling, shattering lives, homes and places of work, when the government came up with a scheme to evacuate children to Canada, Australia and other willing countries, for the duration of the war. Parents weren't allowed to go, but people were chosen who had the right references, to escort the children to safety. Alice King was a school teacher and librarian and longed to do something to help. When she heard of the evacuation process, she applied to be an escort of children, and was accepted. The day the SS Carlisle left the docks in London, Alice was on board with several children, two of them, Georgie and Arthur, were Lily Nicholls' children. Alice and Lily had met when she picked the children up, ready for the long voyage to Canada.
The Carlisle was being escorted by a flotilla of vessels, including Navy warships, and once they'd reached the limit of convoy escort, the warships peeled away, leaving Carlisle vulnerable. It was during the hours of darkness when a violent storm had hit, that the ship was torpedoed, the twelve lifeboats were cast into the sea with people tossed into the waves. The conditions were horrific, but surely they would be rescued soon, those survivors who'd managed to stay on the lifeboats? Once daylight arrived and the storm lessened, only one lifeboat was left, floating on the sea. What would happen to the people desperately clinging to life on that lonely lifeboat?
The Last Lifeboat is a phenomenal read by Hazel Gaynor, which I was completely involved in. Inspired by the true events of the SS City of Benares which took evacuated children to Canada, it was interesting to read the author's notes about part of the second world war which I wasn't aware of. So well written I felt I was part of the story. Emotional, heartbreaking but heartwarming, the trauma that everyone went through was horrific. I felt so close to little Billy Fortune, to Arthur, and the other children. An exceptional read, The Last Lifeboat is one I highly recomend.
With thanks to NetGalley and HarperCollins UK for my digital ARC to read in exchange for an honest review.