Chris Cleave has captured the grit and grind of the bombing of London in his 1916 publication, Everyone Brave is Forgiven. Mary North, our protagonist, is of the “upper class” frittering away her days with her best friend, Hilda, concerned only with eligible young gentlemen, and how to hook them into matrimony.
WAR IS DECLARED, and Mary heads to the nearest recruitment office to “do her part” and to “get in on the action,” with dreams of espionage missions and other assignments suitable to her education and background. Hilda dreams of all the young officers who will need to be consoled before shipping out and from whom promises of marriage might be obtained.
Alistair and Tony, flatmates and properly educated gentlemen ,choose not to enlist but to wait out the war with as little disturbance to their lifestyles and friendship as possible. Fate and the Axis have other plans for all these young people.
The growth of character through the intertwining of these four young lives during WWII (covers the years 1939 to 1942, specifically) is the fascinating story of this novel. Cleave, author of the awesome Little Bee, never promises a happy-ever-after-ending, but he always delivers a satisfactory one,which is good enough for me. There is enough humor, some of it dark, to get you through the tough, brutal aftermath of the bombings, and the novel employs several important themes: racial discrimination in England during the War, the love of teaching, women’s “place” and how the war changes it, romance, and the difficulties of communication.
The book has been described as “Inspirational…” and “Moving…” by critics. I found it both.
World War 2 was such a fascinating time in history in all areas. I think for women especially since we went from “mostly being known as wife or going to be a wife” material to workers, heads of households, and rebels. This does sound inspiring.
LikeLiked by 1 person
WWII was the beginning of women becoming women as individuals rather than extensions of their husbands or somebody’s mother. My mother turned 21 during the second world war, held a job (the men were all overseas fighting) and because war separated my mother and father for periods of time, it acted as birth control. I was not born until 1944;practically all was over but the signings of treaties. Women were certainly emancipated (to a degree) during this time, and it demonstrates this in the Cleave book.
LikeLike
You gravitate to historical fiction, I think. It’s a difficult genre to write; one wrong detail can knock me offtrack. Glad to see you enjoyed this one.
LikeLiked by 1 person