The Holley Sisters of Thornthwaite

A Vicarage Christmas, A Vicarage Reunion, A Vicarage Wedding and A Vicarage Homecoming by Kate Hewitt

In this charming series of four contemporary novels set in the Lake District of northwest England, four sisters all deal with turning points in their lives, including jobs, romances, housing, and personal growth. The Holley sisters grew up in the Thornthwaite vicarage and have returned home in A Vicarage Christmas. They are all dismayed to learn that their parents, Roger and Ruth, plan to leave soon for missionary work in China.

Esther, Anna, Rachel, and the much younger Miriam cope with a number of serious issues, including an unexpected pregnancy, a possible divorce, stuttering, and unresolved grief. Local teacher Rachel is looking forward to a big wedding, a very large house, a puppy, and a family of her own. Sharp-tongued Esther is suddenly discontented with everything in her life. Quiet Anna realizes she must finally deal with her stuttering and some grief issues, while Miriam has been traveling the world, ending up in Australia before heading back to England to start over without a university degree or good job prospects.

I enjoyed listening to this series on audio, available from my public library on Hoopla, narrated by Hannah Curtis. I plan to look for more books by Kate Hewitt, especially if they’re narrated by Hannah Curtis.

Brenda

The Bookbinder

The Bookbinder by Pip Williams

Peggy Jones, 21, and her twin sister Maude fold and gather sections of books at the Oxford University Press before and during World War I. They live on a narrowboat moored on a canal, with friends on a nearby boat.

Peggy is occasionally scolded for reading the pages as she folds them, and enjoys bringing home sections of books that weren’t good enough to bind.

Maude loves to fold paper, and makes paper stars at home. She doesn’t talk much, mostly echoing phrases she hears other people say. Lotte, a Belgian refugee, starts working at the binder. She finds Maude’s company soothing, so that Peggy can volunteer, along with posh Gwen, to read to injured soldiers, including Bastian, a gravely injured Belgian.

Suffragette Tilda, their late mother’s close friend, volunteers as a nurse’s aide and is sent to a hospital near the front. Her letters to Maude and Peggy, sent through an acquaintance to avoid the censors, keep them informed about life on the front. The war and the influenza epidemic certainly do not make for cheerful reading, but the characters, setting and plot really drew me into the story.

This book made me want to visit Oxford again, or at least reread Gaudy Night by Dorothy Sayers. Peggy seems real—her dreams, struggles, good and bad choices, and her daily life. Tiffany Girls by Shelley Noble is a good readalike. This was a remarkable read, and will be published later in July.