Skip to main content

Featured

The Year of What If by Phaedra Patrick #Review

  I am delighted to join in the celebrations for the latest novel by Phaedra Patrick , The Year of What If. You can read my review of The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper   here and The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy  here Can the future be rewritten? On the verge of her second marriage, Carla Carter knows she’s finally found the one. She and her fiancé, Tom, met through Logical Love, a dating agency she founded for the pragmatically minded, and she’s confident that, together, they will dispel an old family curse claiming Carter women are unlucky in love. But Carla’s highly superstitious family insists she visit a fortune teller before her big day, and the tarot cards reveal that a different man holds the key to Carla’s happiness – someone she met while travelling during a gap year, twenty-one years ago. This startling information spurs Carla to trace and revisit the ex-boyfriends she met during that time before she walks down the aisle. From Barcelona to Am...

Digging for Victory at Rookery House by Rosie Hendry #Review

 

I am dekighted to feature the latest in Rosie Hendry's  family saga, Digging for Victory at Rookery House. Readers of her Mother's Day Club series will recognise some of the characters. My reviews can be found here:  The Mother's Day Club.   |  Mother's Day Victory.A Wartime Welcome at Rookery House

 
Spring has arrived and it’s time to Dig for Victory…

March 1941

After Flo Butterworth loses everything in Manchester’s Christmas Blitz, she decides to leave the area and join the Women’s Land Army. Putting the past firmly behind her, she arrives at Rookery House in Norfolk hoping for a new start and a chance to do the gardening work she loves.

The grip of war has intensified and growing more food is vital to keep the nation going. Thea buys an extra field to grow crops, and in the village, her sister Prue leads members of The Mother’s Day Club and Women’s Institute as they take on a derelict allotment. Meanwhile the construction of a nearby aerodrome disrupts village life and brings even more new residents to Rookery House, including Hettie’s difficult sister, Ada. With Rookery House now bursting at the seams, will it still be the happy home it’s always been?

When an enemy plane crashes nearby, Flo must help German airmen who might have been directly responsible for her family loss. She quickly finds that her heart-breaking past cannot so easily be forgotten. Can she do the right thing? And will her new friends help her move on towards a brighter future?

A heart-warming and uplifting novel following the much-loved characters from the award-winning Mother’s Day Club.


 My Thoughts

Despite the backdrop of wartime, this is an uplifting read which highlights what can be achieved when people work together. The women in the community take support from each other and you see how they try to provide for their families and friends through the different Home Front schemes, planting up allotments, making do and mend. As newcomers are brought to the village, they offer a friendly welcome. I enjoyed seeing the different elements of the Home Front all working together. That is not to say that the story is in any way sentimentalised or glossed over. Some of the characters have difficult struggles due to the effect of the war and challenges to overcome. You see that their view of the 'enemy' is not clear cut but nuanced.

    Central to this story is the newcomer, Flo, who has joined the Land Army after a traumatic event. At first, she struggles to settle in the homely environment of Rookery House as she is trying to protect her feelings. As the story develops, you hope that the village will work its magic. Full of period detail, with some likeable and credible characters, this is a great visit to a fascinating period.

In short: family, friendship, community


About the Author

Award winning author, Rosie Hendry lives by the sea in North Norfolk with her husband and children. She writes uplifting, heart-warming historical fiction based on true events from our social history. Listening to her father’s tales of life during the Second World War sparked her interest in this period and she loves researching further, seeking out gems of real-life stories which inspire her writing.

 

You can follow Rosie here: Website   |  Facebook   | Twitter

                                          |  Instagram 


Book links: Amazon UK  |  Amazon US
 
 
Thanks to Rosie Hendry and Rachel of Rachel's Random Resources  for a copy of the book and a place on the tour. 

Check out the rest of the tour!
 

 


 

Comments