Donna Douglas
A YOUNG woman’s arrival in the Blitz-hit town of Hull sets
tongues wagging… and Edie Copeland is hugging secrets to her heart as well as a
suitcase full of her worldly goods.
Welcome to the first book in a drama-packed Yorkshire Blitz
Trilogy from Donna Douglas, the York-based author whose popular Nightingale
series brought a London pre-war hospital vividly to life, and won her an army
of fans.
A Mother’s Journey launches this exciting new saga series
and is based on Douglas’s research into the stories of Hull residents who lived
through the war. Using diaries, letters and the heartbreaking accounts of
children who lived through the Blitz, her aim is to ‘convey some of their fighting
spirit.’
When pregnant widow Edie Copeland arrives at Jubilee Row in Hull, in
June 1940, it’s just a day after the Luftwaffe have dropped bombs on the city’s
King George’s Dock and only weeks since
Britain saw its troops undergo the terrible events at Dunkirk. Edie has left both her home and her job at the Rowntrees
Factory in York after tragedy struck and is determined to make a fresh start.
CAPTIVATING NEW SERIES: Donna Douglas |
But
she is a stranger to this coastal city and this street, and the secrets from
her past have made her guarded and wary, and struggling to make new friends.
The difficult and bullying Patience Huggins, Edie’s fellow tenant
at number ten Jubilee Row, makes it clear that Edie is unwelcome and is
convinced that there is something suspicious about her.
Fortunately, the neighbours are a little more welcoming and
Edie is soon made to feel at home by the Maguire and the Scuttle families, and
their matriarchs, Big Mary Maguire and her skinny widow friend Beattie Scuttle.
Edie is worried that she may not have enough money to pay
her rent and bills but as air raid sirens sound, and the war feels closer than
ever, the community has to stick together.
Edie is also still hiding something, and she doesn’t know
how much longer she can keep it up. Is the past going to catch up with her and
will she still be able to call Jubilee Row home when the truth comes out?
Douglas brings us a vibrant cast of characters in this
opener to what promises to be a captivating new series. From the double act of
irrepressible Big May Maguire and her ‘thin as a whip’ friend Beattie Scuttle,
to an entertaining supporting cast of family and neighbours, this is a
danger-laced tale of love, loss, loyalty and camaraderie in the hardest of
times.
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Laughter and tears are never far away as Edie settles into
her new home and discovers that friendship, kindness and sharing troubles in
the present are sometimes far more important than trying to hide secrets from
the past.
Laced through with no-nonsense Yorkshire humour, and
lashings of rich, nostalgic period detail, this is a fascinating portrait of
everyday life on the home front in wartime, with its hardships and
uncertainties, and will leave readers counting down to the next visit to
Jubilee Row.
(Orion, paperback, £7.99)
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