The third installment of the adventures of Emmy Lake, intrepid advice columnist for Woman's Friend, once again features her efforts to keep spirits up despite the lengthening war. It's July 1944, and the staff have decided to make a temporary camp in the country at Rose House, thanks to the kindness of a friend's grandmother. The paper sails along with nary a blip while staff members navigate living and working together. And one of the best collaborations ends up being a wedding. With resourcefulness, creativity, and force of will, Emmy is determined to make the day memorable in spite of rationing and so much scarcity.
A wedding isn't the only project Emmy undertakes. When her husband gets sent to places unknown, she carries on valiantly until she gets a telegram about his assumed capture. This sets her on a new course that puts her in the path of other women whose husbands, brothers, or boyfriends are missing as well. Emmy is determined to do all she can to raise spirits and keep up morale not only through her column in Woman's Friend and by sharing more about the remarkable work women are doing in the war.
As coworkers and friends pour their hearts into their work and their families, Emmy keeps tackling the next project, helping to distract her from the loneliness of her husband's absence. With one friend married and a coworker soon to be, Emmy finds some bright spots to focus on until the best laid plans go awry. But with each new challenge, Emmy continues to carry on--exactly what she's been encouraging other women to do. And as the political war seems to drag on and on, the people in Emmy's world face one type of war or another: some publicly and some privately. With each new hurdle in her life or a friend's, she discovers hidden reserves she didn't know she had.
The whole Dear Mrs. Bird series is a cozy experience--like joining a good friend over a cuppa and facing life head-on with courage and resolve and never giving in to despair. While these particular characters may be fictional, they are modeled after so many women who made it through the war years with grace and pluck. Who wouldn't want to be like them? Bravo to Ms. Pearce for creating such a satisfying and meaningful series. I highly recommend it!
Disclaimer: I received a free digital copy of Dear Miss Lake from Scribner through NetGalley for the purpose of review. No other compensation was received.
No comments:
Post a Comment