Morland Dynasty #29, 1915, 530 pages.
This is not one of the better ones, in my opinion. There's really a lot about life and death at the front, as Morland men are directly involved. Their wives / girlfriends / lovers suffer at home in various ways, but our heroines try to keep busy doing things for the war effort and trying to find personal satisfaction in so doing. That's not all they're busy at, though, as the reader can find out for themselves.
In these books which are relatively closely spaced in time, there are a lot of recurring characters. This is where it would be most important to read the books in order if possible. When you have already read later ones, you have 20 / 20 "hindsight" and can urge the characters "don't do that", but they do it anyway. Oh well, c'est la vie.
There isn't much happiness in this book - it's depressing - and what little there is probably won't turn out well.
As usual, the author does a good job of interweaving real history into her fictional world. I started experiencing a bit of deja vu with some events and passages, and I wonder if perhaps there was some repetition between this series and the War at Home series, which I have already read.
I'm giving this one a rating of 3.2.