Rachel Hore
A LOVE affair which blossomed amidst the death and despair
of the First World War battlefields leaves 19-year-old Alice Copeman pregnant
and at the mercy of a disapproving society which has little sympathy for
unmarried mothers.
Forced by her father and stepmother to give up the baby for
adoption, Alice must try to shut out the memory of her little girl but secrets from
the past can never be truly buried… and two lives will intertwine in the most
remarkable way.
Rachel Hore, who worked in London publishing for many years
and now teaches creative writing at the University of East Anglia, has become a
master of beautiful, multi-layered novels and here she brings us the poignant
tale of a young mother’s sacrifice and a girl’s desperate search for the truth.
Using her trademark compassion and human insight, Hore gets
to the heart of the powerful bonds that tie a mother to her child, and the
emotional fallout that ensues when that precious relationship is fractured.
In 1917, Alice Copeman is serving as a VAD nurse on the
Western Front when she falls in love with injured soldier Jack and, believing
that they will one day marry, the young couple succumb to temptation. But when the man she loves is killed and 19-year-old Alice
discovers she is pregnant, she returns home to London in disgrace and is told
that she will have to give up the baby both for her own sake and the child’s to
avoid shame and scandal.
MULTI-LAYERED NOVELS: Rachel Hore |
Although Alice recognises that her stepmother Gwen has saved
her from ‘a life in the shadows, a life that would have ended before it had
properly begun,’ she cannot help but think about the small, ‘kitten-like’ baby
girl she gave away, and still mourns the young soldier who would never have the
chance to know his daughter.
Meanwhile, Edith and Philip Burns, a childless couple from a
seaside town in Suffolk, yearn for a child of their own. They secretly adopt a
baby girl, Irene, telling everyone that she is the child of cousins who have
been killed in an accident.
But Edith, who often wonders why she allowed herself to take
on a baby that she had never really ‘warmed to’ from the start, discovers soon
afterwards that she is expecting a baby of her own and her son, Clayton, is the
child that ‘would be hers indisputably.’ As Irene grows up, she knows that she is adopted and different
from other children, but no one will tell her the full truth of her birth, and
so she finds solace with schoolboy Tom Dell and his eccentric, unmarried artist
mother, Miss Juniper, who make her welcome in their modest home.
In London, Alice is putting hopes of marriage and children
behind her, and inspired by the ‘sense of purpose’ she had found while nursing
in France, she embarks upon a pioneering career as a doctor, striving to make
her way in a male-dominated world.
And Irene, struggling to define her own life, eventually
leaves her Suffolk home to find work and more self-fulfilment in London, and as
the two women’s lives intertwine across two decades, will the painful
separation of mother and child finally be resolved?
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Hore weaves together the strands of Alice and Irene’s individual
experiences with careful attention to historical and social detail, and through
a cleverly worked cast of characters who bring added life and depth to a story
steeped in authenticity and emotional wisdom.
The limitations and restrictions on women in what was still
predominantly a man’s world in the post-First World War period spring to life
and serve as a timely reminder of the ongoing battle for full female equality
one hundred years later. Warm, compelling, elegantly written, and full of fascinating
20th century social history, The Love Child is the perfect read for winter
nights.
(Simon & Schuster, paperback, £8.99)
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