Wednesday, 13 May 2020

On The Road Not Taken by Paul Dodgson @pauldodgson BLOG TOUR #GuestReview @jaustenrulesok #RandomThingsTours @unbounders





On the Road Not Taken is a memoir about the transformational power of musicIt begins with a boy growing up in a small town on the Kent coast in the 1970s, who learns to play the guitar and dreams of heading out on the open road with a head full of songs. But when the moment comes to make the choice he is not brave enough to try and do it for a living.
Time passes but the desire to explain the world through music never goes away. And as the years go by it gets harder and harder to risk looking like a fool, of doing the very thing he would most like to do, of actually being himself. Eventually, thirty-five years later, when it feels like time is running out, he walks out onto a stage in front of 500 people and begins to sing again.
What follows is an extraordinary period of self-discovery as he plays pubs, clubs, theatres and festivals, overcoming anxiety to experience the joy of performance.





On The Road Not Taken by Paul Dodgson was published in August 2019 by Unbound.






I'm delighted to welcome guest reviewer Louise Wykes to Random Things today, sharing her review of the book for the #RandomThingsTours Blog Tour.


You can find Louise on Twitter @jaustenrulesok











Louise's Review of On The Road Not Taken


On The Road Not Taken by Paul Dodgson was published by Unbound on 22nd August 2019. I would like to thank the publisher for sending me a copy to review and Anne Cater for agreeing to host my review on her blog. 
I was attracted to the blurb of this book as it promised a tale of someone who had left trying to fulfil his lifelong dream until later in life so was interested to read about how a journey like this would be undertaken. The author writes in his introduction that the book was not intended as a full autobiography but rather more of a memoir whereby he is moulding the story he is telling into something that is more palatable to a reader rather than a dry record of facts.. He accepts that the messiness of real life cannot be neatly tied up in the way a conventional novel could be. 
The author alternates his chapters between his young years in the late 1970s where he starts discovering more about music and how much it will consume his life and his current day life in 2016 and 2017. The chapters have song titles as headers and sometimes it becomes clear from what happens in each chapter why the song is chosen but for others it’s a little less obvious (well it was for me anyway). 
As a mum to three children who sometimes finds it hard to fit in reading with everyday life, I have to say I do appreciate short chapters but I felt in this book the chapters were too short to feel as if I was really involved in seeing the worlds that the author wanted me to see. I would have felt more engaged with the story in both timelines if each chapter had been longer and more involved. I know that the author is a songwriter also and maybe it was his intention to have little vignettes into his world but I felt they weren’t enough for me to feel as if I had an emotional connection with what was happening on the page. 
I felt that I engaged far more fully with the chapters dealing with the author’s childhood. There seemed to be more insight in these chapters and they moved me more. I felt in the chapters dealing with his current life that there seemed to be a wall between the author and myself as a reader. Maybe the author was
more conscious that these chapters were closer to him and his real life so maybe was unconsciously editing himself in his reactions.
 
On the whole I felt that this book lacked narrative drive. I appreciate that this is a memoir and not a work of fiction, but I felt little compulsion to keep turning the pages to discover what happened in each time period, maybe if I had I may have enjoyed the book more. I also have to confess that I am not a musical person at all so I may not have been the intended audience. The writing is clean and concise and I really felt connected with the author in his childhood chapters and I am pleased that eventually the author succeeded in doing what he wanted, finally, in his life.






Paul Dodgson is a writer, radio producer, teacher and musician. 
Paul joined the BBC as a studio manager and went on to become a producer making programmes for all BBC Radio networks. 
In 2001 Paul left the BBC and has since written 16 plays for BBC Radio 4 and been a member of the Eastenders writing team. 
In the theatre Paul has written several plays for young people and been commissioned to write music and lyrics for five musicals including The Nutcracker at Theatre Royal Bath and Nuffield Southampton. 
Paul has taught creative writing around the world, has been writer-in-residence at Exeter University and a Hawthornden Fellow. 
Paul has a particular interest in teaching techniques of memoir writing and three of his BBC radio plays have told life stories including On The Road Not Taken, which began life on BBC Radio 4.

Twitter @pauldodgson






Tuesday, 12 May 2020

One Moment by Linda Green @LindaGreenisms @QuercusBooks #OneMoment #BookReview




Finn and Kaz are about to meet for the first time.
Ten-year-old Finn, a quirky, sensitive boy who talks a lot and only eats at cafes with a 5-star hygiene rating, is having a tough time at school and home.
Outspoken Kaz, 59, who has an acerbic sense of humour and a heart of gold, is working at the café when Finn and his mum come in.
They don't know it yet, but the second time they meet will be a moment which changes both of their lives forever . . 







One Moment by Linda Green was published in paperback by Quercus Books on 5 March. My thanks to the publisher who sent my copy for review.


This is one of the most heart-warming, and heart-breaking stories that I've read for a long time.
Finn is a ten-year-old boy, who is a little bit quirky. He knows he is, and his love for Alan Titchmarsh, roses, talking, and only eating in 5-star hygiene rated cafes is nurtured by his loving Mum. His Dad tolerates it, but doesn't really understand him quite as well as Mum.

Kaz works in a 5-star rated cafe. She serves up breakfast and cups of builder's tea. Kaz is almost 60 with a sharp wit and a heart of gold. Behind her sunny smile she deals with a lot of serious issues. Her brother Terry has serious mental health problems, and Kaz is his sole carer. She's looked after him for over forty years; their own mother failed miserably as a parent.

When Finn and Kaz meet one day, their lives change forever. Kaz's determination to protect the underdog results in her losing her job, whilst Finn is about to face the biggest tragedy of his young life.

There's one huge event that is the centrepiece to this story and Finn and Kaz each narrate their side of the tale in the 'before' and 'after'. The reader is kept in the dark as to what happens and when this is finally revealed, it's shocking and breathtaking.

Linda Green deals with issues that range from how the most vulnerable in society are treated by the establishment to the the most serious mental illnesses. She does it with a warmth and compassion that is beautifully portrayed through her words. The story is relevant and at times, anger inducing, but is wonderfully compelling.




Linda Green is the bestselling author of nine novels, which have sold more than one million copies and been translated into 12 languages. 

Linda has lived in West Yorkshire for the past 18 years but was born in North London in 1970 and brought up in Hertfordshire. She wrote her first novella, the Time Machine, aged nine, but unfortunately the pony-based time travel thriller genre never took off.

Linda lives in West Yorkshire with her husband and son.


For more info, please go to Linda's website at www.linda-green.com, like @lindagreenauthor on Facebook and follow @LindaGreenisms on Twitter and linda green books on Instagram







Monday, 11 May 2020

In Five Years by Rebecca Serle @RebeccaASerle @QuercusBooks #InFiveYears #BookReview




Where do you see yourself in five years?
Type-A Manhattan lawyer Dannie Kohan has been in possession of her meticulously crafted answer since she understood the question. On the day that she nails the most important job interview of her career and gets engaged to the perfect man, she's well on her way to fulfilling her life goals.
That night Dannie falls asleep only to wake up in a different apartment with a different ring on her finger, and in the company of a very different man. The TV is on in the background, and she can just make out the date. It's the same night - December 15th - but 2025, five years in the future.
It was just a dream, she tells herself when she wakes, but it felt so real... Determined to ignore the odd experience, she files it away in the back of her mind.
That is, until four and a half years later, when Dannie turns down a street and there, standing on the corner, is the man from her dream...




In Five Years by Rebecca Serle is published by Quercus on 10 March 2020.

A version of this review was previously published in the Daily Express.

Dannie Kohan is a New York lawyer in her early thirties. She has planned her life meticulously for as long as she can remember.
She has the apartment, the boyfriend and now she has an interview at the law firm that she's dreamt of working for since she was a small girl.

The day of her interview is also the day that her boyfriend David will ask her to marry him. In the perfect Manhattan setting, with the perfect ring, and of course, Dannie knew this would happen. It is all in her plan. After a day of success; she nailed the interview and she said yes to the ring, Dannie falls asleep and has a dream.
She's in a strange apartment, with a strange man and it's five years in the future. Whilst Dannie is unsettled by the dream and often thinks about the feelings it evoked in her, it's not until four and half years later, when she meets the actual man from her dreams that she begins to question her plan.

This is not a traditional love story as Dannie doesn't appear to have one romantic bone in her body. What it is, is a beautifully described story of friendship. For it is Dannie's relationship with her oldest friend Bella that takes centre stage here. The author carefully and intelligently creates the most wonderful, achingly beautiful friendship between two very different women. Dannie's dream, and her five year plan is integral to their story, but it is the true and unfailing loyalty of friends that is the most powerful theme here.

Poignant, thought provoking and captivating.




Rebecca Serle is an author and television writer who lives in New York and Los Angeles. She is the author of six novels and codeveloped the hit TV adaptation of her YA series Famous in Love.
She received her MFA from the New School in NYC. 

She loves Nancy Meyers films, bathrobes, and giving unsolicited relationship advice. 



www.rebeccaserle.com
Twitter @RebeccaASerle
Instagram @rebecca_serle
Author Page on Facebook







Saturday, 9 May 2020

The Carer by Deborah Moggach #RandomThingsTours #TheCarer @TinderPress #DeborahMoggach BLOG TOUR #Review






James is getting on a bit and needs full-time help. So Phoebe and Robert, his middle-aged offspring, employ Mandy, who seems willing to take him off their hands. But as James regales his family with tales of Mandy's virtues, their shopping trips and the shared pleasure of their journeys to garden centres, Phoebe and Robert sense something is amiss.
Then something extraordinary happens which throws everything into new relief, changing all the stories of their childhood - and the father - that they thought they knew so well.











The Carer by Deborah Moggach was published in paperback by Tinder Press on 30 April 2020. My thanks to the publisher who sent my copy for review as part of the #RandomThingsTours Blog Tour



I've been reading Deborah Moggach for many years, I didn't realise quite how long it was until I looked back on my reading list. It's over thirty years! I started with her novel Porky that was published in 1983, and have since read everything else that she's written.

I do prefer her more contemporary novels, although she is probably best know for Tulip Fever and These Foolish Things (aka The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel). If you are ever looking for an author who can bring the most ordinary of characters living in fairly mundane situations to life, I'd really recommend that you try one of her books, if you haven't already.

The Carer is trademark Moggach; she takes four lead characters and paints them so incredibly well that they begin to take over, I found myself pondering them, even when doing something else and their voices called me back to the story constantly.

James is elderly, he was married to many years, is a retired Professor and lives alone. His two middle-aged children: Phoebe and Robert are delighted when they recruit carer Mandy to look after James. Neither of them are particularly loving people, although they are both fond of their father. 
Robert was made redundant from a high-powered City job, and spends his days in a garden shed, writing a novel, whilst his glamorous TV news reader wife Farida continues to keep them in the luxury that they've got used to.
Phoebe is single, an artist, and lives in the Wales countryside. She's unfulfilled, with a string of failed relationships behind her and currently involved with an ageing hippy called Torren who lives in a hut in a nearby forest.

Mandy is unlike anyone that moves in their circles. Overweight, wearing silver leggings and speaking as she sees on a regular basis, she's something of an enigma, but James seems to really like her and if Robert and Phoebe don't have to worry about wiping his bum and ensuring that he eats, they are happy for Mandy to stay.

However, it's not long before both of them become suspicious of Mandy. James seems frailer, and confused. He's wearing tracksuit bottoms and enjoying trips to a hedgehog sanctuary. What happened to their aloof, intelligent, rarely seen (if they are being honest) father?

As James changes, so do Robert and Phoebe and what this author does so very well is dissect characters and relationships and break them down into the tiniest pieces. The reader can then put them back together again to reveal the real characters, not the person that they show to the world.

The Carer is full of wry humour and stark honesty. It's an absolute joy to read and I was utterly entranced by the characters and the ever evolving plot. Deborah Moggach is so wonderfully observant; the reader will pause to reflect on just how real and authentic her characters are; we may even recognise ourselves at times.

Hugely entertaining and so tenderly written. Highly recommended by me. 




Deborah Moggach is the author of nineteen successful novels including the bestselling Tulip Fever. 
In 2012, her novel These Foolish Things was adapted for the screen under the title The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and starred Judi Dench, Dev Patel, Bill Nighy and Maggie Smith. 
An award-winning screenwriter, she won a Writers' Guild Award for her adaptation of Anne Fine's Goggle-Eyes and her screenplay for the 2005 adaptation of Pride and Prejudice was nominated for a BAFTA. 
Her television screenwriting credits include the acclaimed adaptations of her own novels Close Relations and Final Demand, as well as Nancy Mitford's Love in a Cold Climate and The Diary of Anne Frank. 
Deborah has been Chairman of the Society of Authors and worked for PEN's Executive Committee. 
A fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, she was appointed an OBE in the 2018 New Year's Honours List for services to literature and drama.



Friday, 8 May 2020

Hidden In The Shadows by Imogen Matthews BLOG TOUR @ImogenMatthews3 @AmsterdamPB #HiddenInTheShadows #RandomThingsTours






September 1944: The hidden village is in ruins. Stormed by the Nazis. Several are dead and dozens flee for their lives. Instead of leading survivors to safety, Wouter panics and abandons Laura, the love of his life. He has no choice but to keep running from the enemy who want to hunt him down. Laura must also stay hidden as she is Jewish. Moving from one safe house to another, she is concealed in attics and cellars. The threat of discovery is always close at hand. On the run with no end in sight, the two young people despair of ever seeing each other again. As cold sweeps in signaling the start of the Hunger Winter, time is running out. Wouter’s search now becomes a battle for survival. Where can Laura be? Will they ever be reunited?  
Hidden in the Shadows is an unforgettable story of bravery and love, inspired by historical events.







Hidden In The Shadows by Imogen Matthews was published by Amsterdam Publishers in December last year.

As part of the #RandomThingsTours Blog Tour, I am delighted to welcome the author here today for a special Question and Answer feature.



What gave you the idea to start writing about WW2?

As a child, I used to listen to stories about the war from my Dutch mother, who frequently recalled her life as a young woman living under the German occupation. I was captivated by her stories of bravery and adventure, but it wasn’t until I was a lot older that I understood the dangers she and her family faced, and also their desperate efforts to survive the terrible Dutch Hunger Winter of 1944-45.

When my mother was in her late 80s, I persuaded her to write her stories down, which I transcribed into a booklet for the family. I’m not sure if the younger members ever read it, but I was glad to record her memories, knowing they would fade after she passed away.

At the time, I was writing contemporary fiction and had no intention of writing a WW2 novel. All this changed one holiday, when I discovered a place hidden deep in the Dutch Veluwe woods where persecuted Jews had been given a safe haven from the Nazis.

How did you come across the existence of the hidden village?

Together with my family, I’ve enjoyed many Dutch cycling holidays in Nunspeet on the edge of the Veluwe woods. I’d never heard about the hidden village, until one day I spotted a large hewn stone bearing a plaque at the side of the cycle path. In all the years we’d cycled along this route, I’d never noticed it. It was a memorial to the lives of the local people who helped shelter dozens of Jews in a purpose-built village of huts.

I ventured into the woods and found three huts dug out of the ground, a testament to the cramped conditions the persecuted people had lived in. I stooped to enter the low door into the gloomy interior and tried to imagine what it must have been like for these people living in fear of their lives. The thought of months hiding out in the woods, far from civilisation and loved ones, was chilling.

How come I never knew about this place, I thought, before realising that many others wouldn’t have either. This is what gave me the idea of writing a fictional story based on the lives of real people who had survived persecution. I also wanted to show the other side and how local people also put themselves at risk to save their fellow human beings from the atrocities being committed in the name of the “Fatherland”.

After writing The Hidden Village, why did you decide to write a sequel?

The Hidden Village was published in 2017 by Amsterdam Publishers and rapidly rose up the Amazon bestseller charts. I hadn’t considered writing a sequel at the time, but was inspired by the hundreds of positive reviews and reader requests to find out what happened next.

Hidden in the Shadows continues the dramatic story of the discovery of the village and the struggles of two of its young fugitives who must avoid capture against all odds. Although a sequel, it can be read as a standalone book.

Will there be any other books in the series?

Both books are part of the “Untold WW Stories” series. There is a third novel in the pipeline, a new unrelated story to the first two, and based on one of the little known concentration camps in the Netherlands.

How do you explain the success of your books?

I was completely taken by surprise by the massive response to my novel, The Hidden Village. I believe that so many have been drawn to my books because they feel a connection to stories from WW2, as they may have known people or had family members who themselves suffered at the hands of the Nazis.

This May is an important date as it’s the 75th anniversary since the end of hostilities and the liberation of Holland by the Allies. It was my intention to get down my stories to ensure that they are never forgotten.  

What authors do you enjoy reading?

I love reading and at the moment I’m fascinated by new novels about the Holocaust and WW2. Some do not make easy reading but I’m always heartened by books that show the other side to the horror and how people put themselves as risk to save their fellow human beings. These include The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris and View Across the Rooftops by Suzanne Kelman.

And books you would take along to read on holiday?

I adore the American author, Anita Shreve, and often take one of her books away with me. Most recently, I’ve enjoyed The Stars are Fire and The Lives of Stella Bains.

What’s the best advice you’ve ever received as a writer?

Write every day, even if it’s only a few words. It’s surprising how quickly the word count builds. It’s also the best way of keeping the characters and plot in your head so when you pick up the story the following day you can get straight on with it.  




Imogen Matthews is English and lives in the beautiful University town of Oxford. Before she wrote The Hidden Village, she published two romantic fiction e-novels under her pen name, Alex Johnson. The Hidden Village is published by Amsterdam Publishers, based in the Netherlands.
Imogen has strong connections with the Netherlands. Born in Rijswijk to a Dutch mother and English father, the family moved to England when Imogen was very young.
Every year since 1990, Imogen has been on family holidays to Nunspeet on the edge of the Veluwe woods.
It was here that she discovered the story of the hidden village, and together with her mother’s vivid stories of life in WW2 Holland, she was inspired to write her novel.
You can follow Imogen on Twitter @ImogenMatthews3, and find her on Facebook and Goodreads. Imogen also has a lovely website.




Thursday, 7 May 2020

The Silent Treatment by Abbie Greaves @AbbieGreaves1 @arrowpublishing @midaspr #TheSilentTreatment @PublicityBooks #BookReview







Frank hasn't spoken to his wife Maggie for six months.
For weeks they have lived under the same roof, slept in the same bed and eaten at the same table – all without words.
Maggie has plenty of ideas as to why her husband has gone quiet, but it will take another heartbreaking turn of events before Frank finally starts to unravel the secrets that have silenced him.
Is this where their story ends?
Or is it where it begins?














The Silent Treatment by Abbie Greaves was published by Century in hardback on 2 April 2020. My thanks to the publisher who sent my copy for review.



A version of this review was published recently in the Daily Express


I absolutely adored The Silent Treatment, it took me completely by surprise. I was expecting a thriller, although I'm not sure why. What I found was a beautifully composed exploration of a long relationship. The reader peers into every nook and cranny of Frank and Maggie's lives, finding out far more about them than either of them know.  It's perfectly paced and an absolute joy to read.

Frank and Maggie have been married for a very long time, and on the surface they appear to be happy and loving.  However for the past six months, they’ve not had a conversation. Frank has not spoken one solitary word and Maggie isn’t sure why the silence began, although she has her suspicions.

They eat together and sleep together and the silence begins to get louder and louder.

One day Frank comes downstairs to find Maggie unconscious in the kitchen with the empty packaging from her sleeping pills beside her. She’s alive, but seriously ill.  In hospital, Maggie is placed in an induced coma, whilst Frank realises that he must find his voice.

The Silent Treatment is an in-depth, and beautifully written exploration of relationship and family. This debut author has shown incredible insight into how loneliness, grief and guilt can shape a marriage.

Maggie and Frank’s stories, told through her diary and Frank’s own voice celebrate the hope, love and tension that have shaped their relationship. The characters have been created with empathy and realistically; showing their multiple flaws, along with their total devotion to family life.

Deeply buried secrets are revealed, both to the characters, and to the reader, explaining the utter desolation of how lonely they have both felt despite living under the same roof.

With an underlying air of suspense and mystery and an overwhelming sense of emotional tension, this is a story that will touch the hardest of hearts. A cleverly structured and superbly moving story that will resonate with fans of Jojo Moyes, David Nicholl and Gail Honeyman.



Praise for The Silent Treatment 

An original and moving debut from a talented new voice.’ SANTA MONTEFIORE
'This is an extraordinarily tense yet tender portrait of a marriage ... written with assurance and agonising insight, and the characters of Maggie and Frank will stay with me for a long time' Daily Mail
'Beautifully written in Greaves’s unique voice... Poignant, heart-breaking and insightful.Woman & Home
A must read’ Sunday Express
‘Heart-breaking secrets tenderly evoked with intelligence and depth. Maggie and Frank are unforgettable characters’ RACHEL HORE, author of The Memory Garden
'Empathetic, beautifully written ... will resonate with fans of Jojo Moyes, David Nicholls and Gail Honeyman.' Daily Express
'I adored this powerful, heart-breaking taleThe Sun

‘Such stunning prose, and such insight for a debut author… I was bowled over by Abbie’s writing.’ CLARE MACKINTOSH

'A beautifully written and compelling novel that enthralled us from beginning to end. Frank and Maggie feel so real, and their moving story is simple, but powerfully told.' Heat
When a debut is praised by the likes of Jojo Moyes, you know it's worth reading … You won't be able to put down this tender and heartbreaking read.' Cosmopolitan
‘An unforgettable love story with a mystery that had me captivated until the last, heart-wrenching page. It deserves to be huge’ CATHERINE ISAAC, author of You Me Everything
'Greaves’s insightful account of a long marriage kept us gripped till the very last page' Independent
'Beautifully written... Poignant, heart-breaking and insightful.' Woman

'A tender, heartfelt portrayal of a long marriage with all its secrets. Cleverly structured and beautifully written, this novel celebrates love, hope - and the importance of finding the right words.' LUCY DIAMOND

‘In her tremendously moving debut, a novel that pulses with emotional tension, Abbie Greaves masterfully unpicks a history of ordinary lives facing extraordinary challenges. I found it impossible to look away from the relationship at the heart of this novel.’ GILLY MACMILLAN, author of The Nanny
I really loved it…It’s a very moving book’ JO WILEY





About the Author

A bit about me. Well, I was born in Oxford and from an early age, I read everything - cartoons, the Argos catalogue, cereal boxes. I wasn't that fussy, really! Most of all I loved books, which led me to study English Literature at university. After graduation, I spent three years in publishing and I wrote my first novel, THE SILENT TREATMENT (April 2020) whilst working as an assistant to a literary agent in London. It tells the story of a couple, Frank and Maggie, who have been married for forty years but who haven't spoken for the last six months.

I currently live in Edinburgh with my boyfriend, John, and am hard at work on my follow-up novel, THE ENDS OF THE EARTH. With the time that isn't spent writing or reading (the greatest hobby of all), I force myself to group exercise classes and knit to try and keep my phone-checking habit to a minimum.

For more information about me and news about my writing, check out my website: www.abbiegreaves.com. You can also follow me on Twitter @AbbieGreaves1 or on Instagram @abbiegreavesauthor where you'll also find out more about what I'm reading myself and what I get up to when I'm not at my desk. See you there!






Wednesday, 6 May 2020

When We Fall by Carolyn Kirby BLOG TOUR @novelcarolyn @noexitpress #RandomThingsTours #BookReview #WhenWeFall




England, 1943. Lost in fog, pilot Vee Katchatourian is forced to make an emergency landing where she meets enigmatic RAF airman Stefan Bergel, and then can't get him out of her mind.
In occupied Poland, Ewa Hartman hosts German officers in her father's guest house, while secretly gathering intelligence for the Polish resistance. Mourning her lover, Stefan, who was captured by the Soviets at the start of the war, Ewa is shocked to him on the street one day.
Haunted by a terrible choice he made in captivity, Stefan asks Vee and Ewa to help him expose one of the darkest secrets of the war. But it is not clear where everyone's loyalties lie until they are tested...
Published to coincide with the 75th anniversary of VE Day and based on WWII war atrocity the Katyn massacre, When We Fall is a moving story of three lives forever altered by one fatal choice.


When We Fall by Carolyn Kirby is published on 7 May 2020 by No Exit Press. My thanks to the publisher who sent my copy for review as part of this #RandomThingsTours Blog Tour



When asked about my choice of fiction genre, I rarely mention historical fiction. I'm not sure why as when I look back at some of my all time favourite reads they are most certainly within that genre. Maybe it's because I don't read a lot of historical fiction that I don't consider myself to be a huge fan? I'm not sure, but from now on, I'm going to ensure that I mention this genre all of the time.  Over the past few months I've found myself reading more and more historical fiction, and absolutely loving it.

When We Fall is one of those books, it took me completely by surprise. I was entranced by the characters, the plot and the beauty of the writing. I was transported to an era and to events that I knew nothing about before this. This book has both entertained me, and educated me. It's a beauty.

When We Fall is published to coincide with the 75th anniversary of VE Day and is based on World War II atrocity the Katyn Massacre and is based on the lives of three people who all played central parts in the war; Vee, Ewa and Stefan.

It is, at its heart, a love story; a tangled and entwined tale that looks at loyalties and trust as Ewa and her finance Stefan are separated at the beginning of the war. Continuing to live in occupied Poland when you consider yourself to be wholly Polish is difficult and very dangerous for Ewa as she and her father run a small guesthouse, often occupied by German officers. 
In England, Vee is a pilot for the ATA (Air Transport Auxiliary), she only been flying for a few months, yet she is entrusted to deliver warplanes all over the country.

These women are separated by thousands of miles, but are linked to Stefan. Both Vee and Ewa are enraptured by this man; for Ewa he is her link to the past; her long-term sweetheart. For Vee, Stefan is something of a mystery; most probably a very dangerous liaison, but hard to resist and thoughts of him linger in her head at all times.

When We Fall is meticulously researched and this author encapsulates the horror of war time atrocities that have been covered up for many years; often shocking and always emotional, there are things described within this story that bring tears to the eye and make the heart pound in anger.

I was especially impressed by the strength of Kirby's female characters who are often left behind in a wartime story, both Ewa and Vee display such ferocity of belief, yet question themselves at times too.

I was gripped by this book, it's a beautiful yet heart-wrenching tale that is unforgettable. The fact that is based around real-life facts makes it all the more poignant, and that ending is simply breathtaking.

A wonderful story, one to savour.  Highly recommended .


No Exit Press are hosting a virtual online launch event for When We Fall

Thursday 7 May at 8.15pm - please join the event at the following link




Carolyn Kirby's debut novel The Conviction of Cora Burns was begun on a writing course at Faber Academy and went on to win the Bluepencilagency Award for unpublished novels. Published in March 2019 by No Exit Press the UK and Dzanc Books in North America, the novel has been longlisted for the Historical Writers' Association Debut Crown Award and has been getting praise from reviewers and journalists. The Sunday Mirror called it; 'A great historical novel with bite,' while it was chosen by The Times as an historical fiction book of the month.
Before being a full-time writer, Carolyn worked in social housing and as a teacher. She has two grown-up daughters and lives with her husband in Oxfordshire. 

Twitter @novelcarolyn
Author Page on Facebook