In this second volume in the April Grove series, Lilian Harry concentrates on the women who have to deal with shortages, bombing and war work while their men are away. Spanning from just after Dunkirk to the Spring of 1941, The Girls They Left Behind encompasses the Blitz, ambulance driving and rescue, the difficult life of a land girl, and even the complexities behind being a conscientious objector.
I much preferred this second volume to the first, Goodbye Sweetheart, which contained much hand-wringing over whether the War would come or not and whether and where the children should be sent for their safety. Where that book was a long, slow set-up, The Girls They Left Behind really gets a move-on, with events tumbling all over one another. Particularly effective is Harry's depiction of individual characters' experience in the same Blitz attack.
Once again, I'm happy that Harry trusts us to forgive her for killing off and/or damaging important characters, even if we've grown to love them. Families did not make it through the War unscathed and it would be disingenuous to pretend they didn't. Now that the War has really gotten going, so has the story, and I'm already looking forward to the next volume, Keep Smiling Through.