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The Foyles Bookshop Girls

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The Foyles Bookshop Girls by Elaine Roberts is the first story in The Foyles Girls series. Alice Taylor works at W & G Foyles Bookstore on Charring Cross Road in London with her friends Victoria Appleton and Molly Cooper. Victoria is responsible for her two younger siblings since their parents died four and a half years earlier. Molly is in love with Tony Fletcher who likes to flirt with every woman he encounters. Alice comes from a well-to-do family and her father, Luke has very rigid ideas for women which makes life difficult for Lily, Alice’s spirited sister. Alice loves her job at Foyles and spending time with her beau, Freddie who is a police sergeant. Then England declares war against Germany and the men rush to enlist including Freddie. Before Freddie departs for training camp, he proposes to Alice. The wedding will have to wait until he gets leave. As the war continues, Alice, Victoria and Molly want to find a way to help the war effort at home. Alice learns to drive an ambulance and transfers passengers from the train station to the hospital. She likes to keep herself busy to avoid thinking about the danger those she loves are in. Will Freddie make it home from the war? Are her brothers safe? Will the war ever end? Venture back to 1914 in The Foyles Bookshop Girls.

The Foyles Bookshop Girls takes readers back to 1914 when World War I begins. We see how quickly life can change. The story focuses on Alice but includes her family and friends. Alice comes from a more affluent household than her friends. The author did a wonderful job at setting the stage for the book. Elaine Roberts descriptions brought the book alive for me. I could envision the characters, their homes, and Foyles Bookshop. Alice is a spirited, strong intelligent woman. She was the anchor for her group of friends. I like how the characters developed over the course of the story and the friendship between the ladies deepened. Alice matured and developed new insights and a stronger voice. I just loved the accounts of Foyles Bookshop. It sounded like a magical place with all the wonderful books. When Alice mentioned the smell of the books, I completely agreed and understood. It was interesting how the bookshop operated (how people purchased their books, how the payment system operated). I would have liked more about the Foyles Bookshop. It was not central to the story. I wanted to know more about Victoria and Molly. I am hoping that they will be featured more prominently in the next two books in the series. The Foyles Bookshop Girls contains good writing and it is gently paced. It is a tale of friendship, family, faith and hope. Elaine Roberts is off to a promising start with her debut novel of The Foyles Bookshop Girls.

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This is a delightful story about friendship and family in the build up and start of the First World War, well researched and a pleasure to read.

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I love a wartime saga story and this was a great one as it also included a bookshop. I was drawn in from the start and loved the stories of all three girls. I couldn't put it down.

I really liked all three of the main characters and the setting around the bookshop was perfect. I enjoyed the ups and downs of the story. An excellent cast of supporting characters. Well written, I enjoyed the authors writing style.

I can't wait for the next instalment and to find out what will happen next. Highly recommended, I loved it.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review.

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I loved this book set in WWI London at Foyles Bookshop it was a magnificent read. The characters are well developed and the descriptions are wonderful. I highly recommend it for all book lovers.

I would like to thank Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with a review copy in exchange for my honest and unbiased opinion of it.

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This is the perfect book for book lovers who love to read about bookstores , those who love historical fiction set in WWI and those who enjoy stories of strong female friendships. I enjoyed this book very much . I am glad this is the beginning of what promises to be a very successful series !
This story focuses on Alice and her two friends,, Molly and Victoria.. All three ladies work in Foyles Bookshop in London. All three are very different and come from different backgrounds. All three ladies are about to be impacted by the war. The war is looming and everyone is on edge about their future. Their friendships never wavers and grows stronger with the impending war.
This is a novel full of historical details details including the fascinating book shop. . It shows the reality of a war and how it changes lives and the future of the great city of London. I loved this book and highly recommend it for all that love historical fiction and stories set in WWI.

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What a lovely, original story about the young woman working at Foyles. I love this bookshop in London, and was immediately intrigued when I came across this book. I am happy to report, it did not disappoint. The historical details create a lush setting and the characters develop as the story progresses. If there will be a sequel, I look forward to it!

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Saga fans are going to love Elaine Roberts’ enthralling debut novel set during the First World War, The Foyles Bookshop Girls. Gripping, gutsy and written straight from the heart, this enjoyable saga is the first title in a brand new series that is sure to appeal to fans of Elaine Roberts, Rosie Clarke and Jenny Holmes.

Alice Taylor has always been the sensible one out of her entire family. Alice lets the characters in her favourite stories have all the adventures as she is far too busy solving everyone’s dilemmas, being a shoulder to cry on and a tower of strength for her nearest and dearest to ever get herself into any kind of bother. Unlike her sister who seems to have taken up with a group of suffragettes, Alice is perfectly content staying on the sidelines and not being the centre of attention. However, there is one thing which she will not compromise on or let anyone else persuade her otherwise. Alice has her heart set on working at Foyles bookshop, despite her father’s persistent protestations and she is not about to let anybody stand in the way of her dream. But could England being at war end up costing her the future which she has dreamed about for so long?

Although she is working at Foyles, Alice knows that it is her duty to king and country to do her bit for the war effort. While she works at Foyles during the day, she spends her nights risking life and limb by driving an ambulance around bomb-ravaged London. But the danger she faces at night is nothing when compared to the anguish and misery the ones she loves witness at the Front – from members of her own family to the one man she hopes to spend the rest of her life with. Will the war end up costing Alice not just her professional dreams, but also any chance she might have of a future with the man she has given her heart to by her side?

As the darkness of the Great War threatens to consume England and Alice’s entire existence, she draws comfort from her two best friends, Victoria and Molly, who will stick by her through thick and thin as they provide solace from the heartbreak of war. Will happiness ever be within reach? Will the war destroy all of their lives? Or will courage and determination see Alice, Victoria and Molly through the darkest of times?

A phenomenal read that will touch readers’ hearts and keep them on the edge of their seats from start to finish, The Foyles Bookshop Girls is a fantastic debut written with style, flair and confidence that is sure to have readers eagerly awaiting the next enthralling installment of Elaine Roberts’ terrific series about three women finding their way in a world ripped apart by war.

Rich in atmosphere and period detail and full of wonderful characters readers simply cannot help but care about, The Foyles Bookshop Girls is a terrific World War One saga I highly recommend!

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Thanks Netgalley and the Publisher. A wonderful story and friendship and hope during World War 1 in London. A really good read.

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Excellent story line which was gripping from start to finish. Great characters. I would highly recommend this book.

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I was immediately interested in this book for its focus on young women working in a London bookshop during WWI, as we all know that I can't resist any book about books! While I'm accustomed to seeing many stories pertain to WWII, in a way, it was refreshing to see another momentous time period reflected in fiction that doesn't seem to be discussed as frequently.

Roberts' writing is vivid and truly captures the essence of various family dynamics in an empathetic, engaging, and thought-provoking manner. Not only are we privy to the lives and friendship shared between Alice, Victoria, and Molly, but we also gain perspective into their individual families and how each is effected by the prospect of war. This is a richly drawn character study of different women coming of age during a time of much social and political upheaval. Additionally, once the war begins, we receive access into its significance from not only the perspective of the battlefield, but also on those remaining on the home front.

Ultimately, I loved the quiet message that even in times of chaos, confusion, and havoc, the bookshop remains standing to lend a calming hand with some much needed escape from reality. An understanding that resonates even generations later. You can find out more about the actual Foyles bookshop HERE.

This is the first book in a planned trilogy and was such a captivating start to a series that I'm highly looking forward to continuing!

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What makes this saga so unique? Aside from its absolutely gorgeous cover and brilliant synopsis?
For me personally it would have to be that this novel focuses on The Great War as opposed to most of my saga reading is ww2 fiction. The novel opens in London 1914 and I really think the author did an outstanding job of finding a niche in the saga genre. The genre is heavily dominated by ww2 fiction and I think The Foyles Bookshop Girls offers a welcome break and exploration of the ww1 era.

The Foyles bookshop girls are Alice, Victoria and Molly. They come from very different backgrounds and have their own unique life experiences. Yet they compliment each other perfectly.
Alice is who I would class as the central protagonist.

The novel opens amongst the backdrop of the ‘votes for women’ although the suffragette movement is not heavily featured within the novel. I was glad that the theme was present and included. Alice’s younger sister Lily is heavily involved in the movement and I think of all the characters, I would have liked to have been Lily. She is a rebel with a cause and doesn’t fear a fight for what she believes is right.

Mr Leadbetter is the manager of the bookshop where the three young women work. Alice Taylor, Victoria Appleton and Molly Cooper. Their pasts are explored and they each struck a chord with me or various reasons.

Molly has a new boyfriend Tony Fletcher. The only problem is, Tony has a roving eye and Alice and Victoria are sure it’ll end in tears. But as friends do, they vow to be there for Molly when the time comes.

Victoria has known the greatest struggle, having lost both parents she is solely responsible for raising her younger siblings Stephen (16yrs) and Daisy (18yrs). An unfortunate situation that cost her the love of her life. . . .

‘Her brother and sister had taken her life, just as the rail crash had taken her parents’

Alice has the most upbeat situation, she is currently courting a young police officer named Freddie. She hopes he will propose. Freddie certainly has an announcement to make.
Alice’s father is a domineering bully, one that often makes life at the Taylor household unbearable.

In the background to the central storyline of the girls. The political and community pressure faced by young men to enlist, is explained. With many facing accusations of cowardice if they do not enlist. Eventually several of the men very close to the women enlist and we see the friendships tested by the strain of war and personal loss.

‘War is about innocent people
Killing innocent people’

The clever story of three very different women’s journey through The Great war. 4*

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The Foyles Bookshop Girls is the début novel from Elaine Roberts and the first in a planned trilogy. It centres around three young women who work in the famous London book shop at a time when the world is facing unrest and uncertainty. There is the threat of the unions going on strike coupled with the fact women were campaigning for equals women’s rights with men and also the right to vote but this becomes over shadowed with the outbreak of World War One. People's lives are thrown into chaos, disarray and turmoil as the men of the country are forced to leave their homes and fight for their country. The story centres around three women, Alice Taylor, Molly Cooper and Victoria Appleton. This first books direct focus seemed to be on Alice. The two other girls do feature and have their own stories but I sensed quite early on that perhaps we will learn more details about them the further the trilogy progresses.

The author did a fantastic job of setting the scene and developing the atmosphere and feelings of the people at the time. The only thing I would say is that I would have liked a chapter or two scattered throughout the book that was set abroad. Perhaps detailing how the girls loved ones were faring on the battle fronts, I felt it would enhance the book even more. But on further reflection, I suppose it was more in keeping as to how much news those at home received that we didn't get to observe the men at war. The women and families left behind were always on tender hooks waiting for a letter or when the young boy on his bike arrived at the house with a telegram. They didn't know the horrors their relatives and loved ones were experiencing, maybe the author wanted the reader to experience those same feelings of apprehension, dread and worry. For that is what I certainly did feel at numerous points within the story. But the women had to be strong, life had to carry on on a daily basis as best it could. For if people doubted the war would be won and that those away fighting would never return then they wouldn't have been able to continue on with life and have a happy place for the soldiers to return to.

Alice's family were not what I would call a loving, close family unit and this I would put down to their father Luke. He was stern and never showed his emotions. I felt at times the family lived in fear of doing the wrong thing and therefore if that did happen he would explode. Their mother Sarah was portrayed as meek and at times subservant. But both Alice and her sister Lily had a flare in them, a spirit, women ahead of their times. They could both see that times were changing and that the role of women and families needed to change with them. Lily was adventurous and stood up for what she believed in particular with the suffragette movement and to also become a police woman during the war took guts and determination which she had in spades. I would have loved for her to feature even more because I found her to be an interesting and gutsy character. With both their brothers, Robert and Charles, away fighting and also Alice's new fiancée Freddie away the family had a lot to deal with and as Luke was never supportive or never shared in their worry the women showed how courage and determination will get you through anything no matter what life throws at you. I dislike using this word in relation to a character but I really did detest Luke and his actions and stance with regard to the war. It would take a major event before the wool was pulled from his eyes, before he fully engaged in a realistic, human like way with his family. When this did occur I did understand him much better but my opinions of him didn't alter dramatically.

Foyles, the bookshop provided the backdrop for the girls meeting. It seemed like such a wondrous bookshop, filled to the brim with many worlds and adventures waiting to be explored between the covers of the innumerable books. I found the work routine of the girls very interesting and even little things like the way books were selected and paid for shows how different life is now. As war looms ever larger in the girls lives they each go through many hardships and ups and downs. Their friendship blossomed and deepened as they stood by one another offering support, comfort and solace when needed.

Alice, in my mind was the strongest of all. She was the root and anchor for everyone in the book. Victoria was dealing with her own personal family situation given a tragedy that had occurred several years before and I loved how Alice could see she was struggling and wanted to help her friend. The way Victoria reacted was not what I would have expected but in reality she was struggling and didn't have the words to express fully what she was going through. In a way she was also had her pride and was stubborn but maybe its when we are most vulnerable that we have to accept defeat and let the people who love us in to give their backing and offer a little sound advice and encouragement.

I don't think we know Molly that well having now finished the book but as I have mentioned maybe that will change during the next two books. She too experiences her sweetheart leaving and the emotional repercussions of the fall out of this. She seemed to flit around the outer circle of the group and appear every now and again, at times she was almost forgotten about. In general, I think the book had many storylines and some were explored better than others. Some were mentioned than instantly forgotten and I felt I wanted to know more, to scratch beneath the surface and really get into the hearts and minds of the characters. Maybe scaling back ever so slightly on some aspects of the story and concentrating wholeheartedly on just one or more would have made for a more in-depth read.

Alice remains my favourite character. I thought she grew up so much over the course of the story and she surprised both herself and her family with her actions. She is experiencing something that should be happening as normal with Freddie beside her and surrounded by her family but that was not going to be the case for quite some time. So she was determined to whether the storm as best she could and I believe she did this with dignity, honesty and was to be admired at all times.

I'm keen to see how The Foyles Bookshop Girls series will further develop with The Foyles Girls at War and Christmas at the Foyles Bookshop still to come in 2019. This was a promising début from Elaine Roberts not without a few minor faults but none the less an enjoyable, intriguing and emotional read

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I thoroughly enjoyed the plot, atmosphere, and characters. I would recommend the book to friends and family for their reading pleasure.

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This is such a lovely read; true to the period it's set in, very addictive and the best news of all - it's the beginning of a series!

Alice and her two friends, Molly and Victoria, all work in Foyles Bookshop. With strong rumours of war, they all wonder what the future holds. The girls are firm friends, but each have very different home lives. Alice is a sensible daughter with three siblings - two brothers and a suffragist sister who is forever in trouble with their father for not being as well-behaved as Alice. Their father is quite old-fashioned in his treatment of daughters as opposed to sons, and it can make for a volatile environment at home. This story has Alice as the main protagonist; she is at the centre of everything which happens. With the declaration of war, life changes and women go from being the protected wives and daughters to 'doing their bit', rising in the estimation of some - but not all - men.

This is a novel brimming with details, and which bookworm wouldn't love to hear about a busy bookshop a century ago? It clearly shows the importance of all the little things which ordinary people contributed to the war at home and how hard life was for most. There is nothing I could criticise; skilfully crafted characters and an exquisite storyline all kept my attention from the first page to the last. I am so looking forward to the second book coming out early next year and finding out how life goes for all the people who now seem so real to me. Highly recommended and five glittering stars!

My thanks to publishers Aria for approving my request via NetGalley. This is my honest, original and unbiased review.

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I like the shop very much, so I was interested in the book. Historical novels are also one of my favourite categories, so I thought it would be nice to read it. It is a mixture of a historical novel and a romace, but it is not extreme in either of parts. The historical context is well integrated, so that you sometimes notice it only as a background, but it is not so that it is interchangeable. The story fits the context very well and could work only there.
At the beginning I was a bit confused because of the many characters and their relationship, but at the end of the book, I have a feeling of leaving good friends or a family. The characters develop through the book and I like that. Onla the Father Luke was a bit too negative at the beginning and his change was too much in my eyes.
A nice book to read.

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Three friends working in a bookshop with different experiences in life. With the war thrust upon then, lives continue to change.
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An interesting title focusing on several young women and their families, all connected by friendship and social status, as the girls work in a popular and very busy bookshop in London. Alice, Molly and Victoria have been friends for years, all living solidly upper middle-class lives. Alice and her sister Lily couldn’t be more different: Alice is more circumspect and proper, Lily is prone to speak her mind and get into ‘trouble’ – protesting for the vote, woman’s equality, social equality, you name it. Of course, with a very rigid and dictatorial father at home, constantly nattering on about duty to country, the need for war, and a requirement for rigid adherence to ‘how he wants things to be’ using temper, unspoken threats and menacing body language. Alice’s two brothers, the eldest, enlisting as soon as possible much to his father’s delight and mother’s dismay, the youngest yet too young to enlist is desperately struggling to gain his father’s approval.

When you add in the stories of Victoria as she struggles to keep the household afloat, looking after her younger brother and sister for the past years after the sudden and tragic death of their parents four years earlier, and Molly with her wholly inappropriate boyfriend with his constant flirting and eyes for Alice, there are plenty of ways for this tale of their lives at the onset of war to go. And Roberts uses insets of place, scent and political upheaval, the struggles and worries of the women as they find ‘ways’ to be helpful and useful to the war effort, and the little moments of escape from the worries as the girls do their best to maintain friendships and support systems through all of the changes.

More a story of growth as the three young women come into adulthood, accepting more responsibilities, struggling with shortages and worries, pride and anger, even the constant dangers from nighttime air raids, bombs and the ever-depressing news reports, censored letters from the front (when they come) and the general unease as Alice’s father is a dyed in the wool supporter of the war, unable and unwilling to hear or be concerned with the women’s worries for their sons and brothers. He’s also got a huge secret that displays in his overly brash displays of bravado, a need for supremacy, and the general silence (if avoidance isn’t possible) that his wife and daughters display in his presence.

What emerges here is the full richness of characters that are very much of the time, and the adjustments and approaches that they take in the upending of societal norms, war-time restrictions, dangers and worries. Alice comes into her own, seeing her life and her perspectives change greatly, even with the small struggles she has with moving on despite it al. Her sister Lily’s ability to find an outlet for her more ‘progressive’ views, although holding deep anger toward her father and his apparent uncaring and rigid stances, and even their father’s growth and awakening as the true horrors of war and the soldiers returning broken and ever-changed, will find the war and the struggles and changes it brings will change them all inexorably.

I received an eArc copy of the title from the publisher via NetGalley for purpose of honest review. I was not compensated for this review: all conclusions are my own responsibility.

Review first appeared at < a href=” https://wp.me/p3OmRo-9Oq /” > <a> I am, Indeed </a>

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I came across this book, whilst looking for new books on Amazon. Not that I need any new ones because I already have enough to stock a new library. Anyway back to the point. I read the synopsis for this book and I just knew that this was one book I had to read. It ticked so many boxes for me combining a love of history, a love of sagas and a love of book shops. I was so looking forward to reading this book and I was not to be disappointed, because I absolutely loved reading this book but more about that in a bit.
I loved the character of Alice and by the end of the book, I felt like she was one of my friends. She is a gentle soul, who comes from a well off background but she doesn’t let money change her or give her airs and graces. She works in the bookshop Foyles part time, although she had to convince her father to allow her to do so and she also drops off books at the local hospital for the patients and for those less fortunate than herself. She genuinely has a heart of gold. She is happy in a relationship with a police sergeant called Freddie, who adores her. He asks her to marry him, which she accepts. They are genuinely in love. He goes off to war and Alice wants to be seen to be doing her bit, so she volunteers to drive an ambulance round London, which brings with it a lot of risks. Alice wants to keep busy to avoid having too much time on her hands to worry. Alice has a nightmare of a father, who really is a nasty piece of work. He rules the household with an iron fist and the ladies of the household are frightened of him. If I could have jumped into the pages of the book to give him what for and to sort him out, before giving him a few dozen slaps across the chops with a wet flip flop, then I would have done. I absolutely loathed him. The other two main characters in this book are Victoria and Molly. I really felt for both of them. Victoria lost her parents in a train crash and she has been left to provide for her siblings. Victoria is only young herself and she has had to take on far more responsibilities than a woman of her age should have to. Victoria has her job at Foyles but after the money for the rent on the house and the bills are taken out then there is very little left. Her siblings don’t notice how hard the situation is affecting her and they treat the house like a hotel. I so wished I could have jumped into the pages and sorted those two out. I get that they are grieving but at the same time so is Victoria and the least they could do is to support her as much as she supports them. Molly is a young lady, who goes out with a sleaze bucket called Tony, who chases after anything in a skirt and he seriously gave me the creeps. She does know what he is like though but she puts up with it. I thought that she had low self esteem and she stays with Tony because she thinks that she will never get another man to show an interest in her and in that respect she is grateful to him for showing an interest. The three girls have a strong friendship and they love their jobs at Foyles book shop.
Alice, Victoria and Molly have my ideal job as I would love to work in a bookshop. Where I differ from those three plucky young ladies, is that I wouldn’t want to part with any books and I would physically panic at the sight of books going through the door. I absolutely loved the setting of the bookshop and I absolutely loved the setting of the book in 1914, when Britain was on the brink of the First World War. I am something of a history nerd with a particular interest in the 19th and 20th Centuries and reading this book gave me an insight into what Foyles was like to work in and how the shop was so much different to the bookshops that we know today. I also love the way in which the author has successfully weaved historical events within the book. The book opens with Alice passing a protest demonstration outside parliament regarding women’s suffrage. My great grandmother was a suffragette and reading this book in a way made me feel closer to her and even prouder of her than I was already. I had to chuckle away at another part of the book, when an old lady picks ups and buys a copy of ‘Sons & Lovers’ by D. H. Lawrence. I bet there was enough in that book to make her hair curl. She also flirts shamelessly with Freddie, who happens to be in the bookshop too.
The author’s writing style is such that you can’t fail to be drawn into the story and before you know it, you are hooked on the tale. I can honestly say that I was addicted to this book from the moment I glimpsed the front cover. I loved the brightness of the cover, the picture on the front and I just knew that this was one book that I was going to binge read. So it proved to be as I read it in two sittings! For me, ‘The Foyles Bookshop Girls’ is a real ‘CPID’ (can’t put it down) book. The book wasn’t glued to my hand but it might as well have been because my Kindle came everywhere with me. I was so enchanted by the story that I didn’t realise how quickly the page numbers were speeding past and before I knew it I had finished the book which I was so disappointed about. I was enjoying the author’s writing style, the story, the setting and the historical aspect of the book so much that I just wanted the book to continue.
To conclude I have to say that I thoroughly enjoyed reading ‘The Foyles Bookshop Girls’ and I would definitely recommend this book to other readers, particularly to those people who love sagas. This is one book that you don’t want to miss. I can’t wait to read further books in ‘The Foyles Girls’ series and fortunately we don’t have too long to wait as book two in the series called ‘The Foyles Girls At War’ is due for release on 1st January 2019. Book three in the series ‘Christmas At The Foyles Bookshop’ is due for release on 1st June 2019. Elaine Roberts is certainly an author to look out for and who deserves to be up there with the greats in the saga genre. She is certainly on my list of favourite and must read authors. The score on the Ginger Book Geek board is a well deserved 5* out of 5*.

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Set in WWI London this poignant book gives a glimpse in to how War alters lives and it mainly is based around three lady characters and who work at the Foyles Bookshop. We see how it effects their families, friendships and relationships and what the soldiers go through who go off to fight and how it changes them when they return.
This tale pulled me in from the beginning with the simplistic start introducing all the characters and it kept good pace as we followed them all. A brilliant start to a series. I can certainly recommend this to any reader who enjoys this genre.
My thanks go to the author, publisher and Netgalley in providing a copy of this book in return for a honest review.

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Although Alice's family aren't wealthy, I saw echoes of the early Downton Abbey in this lovely debut novel. We have a stern and apparently cold father, a mother putting her family first, a sensible daughter, a rebel daughter, a loyal housekeeper, and two sons eager for the adventure of war but unprepared for its harsh reality. Against a backdrop of First World War London, Elaine Roberts introduces us to Alice and her two close friends, and the bookshop where the girls work. All the drama, fear and upset of the women of the time is here as they watch their sons, brothers and lovers go off to war and have no idea if they will ever come back. But it's a time of great change for women too as they take on the jobs only ever undertaken by men before and as they fight to get the vote. I would have liked more scenes in the bookshop but the real drama is happening in the household and out in the streets and, of course, off the page in the trenches and battlefields far away. I read late into the night to get to the end and find out if they get their happy endings, but of course the war is not over and there are more books in this series still to come, so the end of this book is not the end of the story! I look forward to the next instalment,

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