The British Booksellers by Kristy Cambron shifts back and forth from WWI to WWII.
Amos Darby and Charlotte Terrington are secret childhood friends with a love for books. But that's all they can ever be. Amos is a tenant farmer's son, and Charlotte is an earl's daughter. Though Charlotte loves Amos, her parents arrange her marriage with Will Holt, the future Earl of Harcourt.
Amos goes off to WWI and comes back scarred. He opens a book shop on Bailey Lane in Coventry, England, but becomes something of a recluse.
Charlotte, now widowed Lady Harcourt, has opened a bookshop as well across the lane with her daughter, Eden. The booksellers have been rivals and enemies for over twenty years, though Eden has tried to negotiate a peace between them.
When an American lawyer, Jacob Cole, shows up with alarming news for Charlotte and Eden, they fight back to keep their estate, even though it is becoming ever harder to maintain.
But when WWII begins and German bombers fly across Coventry, Amos, Charlotte, Eden, and Jacob have to work together to help each other and their neighbors survive.
The Coventry Blitz is referred to as the Forgotten Blitz. The London Blitz received so much attention, Coventry was overlooked in the press. Kristy Cambron says in her author's notes that some officials suppressed news of the devastation of Coventry so as not to damage morale.
The story includes four Land Girls, part of the Women's Land Army in Britain who helped out at various farms and homes across the nation. I had read of these women in other books, so it was neat to see their roles fleshed out a bit more.
The historical story was quite interesting, but Charlotte and Amos' story was so touching.
With characters who have a common love for books and who become rival booksellers, the importance of books comes up often. One of my favorite quotes about this aspect:
Books are an escape that beckons the reader from the heavy burdens of this world.' Isn't that what you told me once? They can challenge as well as comfort. Entertain and educate. Even save us in ways we'd never expect. You've used the words art, oxygen, and life all to describe them. Anyone who can see such value in these pages ought to also see that they could take him away from a future he doesn't want. If anything, that is what Dickens wrote for his characters. Isn't that what you wish for yourself?
I listened to the audiobook, beautifully read by Barrie Kreinik. Happily, this time the audiobook did contain author's notes about the historical aspects of the book. There weren't any notes about what inspired the personal stories, though.
With going back and forth between timelines, it was a little hard to keep up sometimes with where we were in the story. It's not as easy with an audiobook to flip back to the beginning of the chapter to check the dates. Plus 1914 and 1940 sound alike. But it didn't take too long to get oriented.
Overall, I loved the book and the characters and felt for them.
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