Tag Archives: historical fiction

Book Review: The Women by Kristin Hannah

This is the first of Kristin Hannah’s books I’ve read and I certainly got a taste for her work.

The Women tells the story of twenty-one-year-old nurse, Frankie who follows her brother to Vietnam. It’s early in the war and her family has a wall of hero’s depicting photos of all the men in the family who have gone to war and fought. Frankie wants to feel useful and to win her father’s approval enlists once her nursing training ends.

Arriving in Vietnam is a baptism of horror for a young woman from a privileged background who was raised to be a future wife and mother. Frankie is thrown into the chaos of death and injury in trying conditions. Once her tour ends and she’s back home her expectations are dashed by a very different America from the one she left. She is thrust into the midst of family disapproval and community disgust about America’s involvement in the war.

I’ve never read anything set during the Vietnam war and certainly nothing about the brave women who were there. Hannah has certainly done her research and puts the reader into the horror of everyday life, of blood and dirt and rain and heat. There is also romance and love and friendship as well.

There are also themes of post-traumatic stress, loss and trauma and while it is a tough one to read at times, there are moments of light and shade. There’s a lot packed into this novel and sometimes the romance angles were a little too predictable particularly in the last quarter.

Otherwise, it’s a solid read which I enjoyed.

Book Review: The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon

This is a novel which I can’t get out of my head.

Set in 1789, the story is inspired by the real-life midwife, Martha Ballard who delivered hundreds of babies in her community around the Kennebec River in the USA.

Unusual for the time Martha was literate and kept a diary of events, particularly the alleged rape of a minister’s wife by the local judge. Lawhon has cleverly used the diaries and fictionalized a story.

Apart from delivering babies and administering women’s health, Martha is also called upon the examine the dead man making the pronouncement that he has been beaten and hung prior to being thrown into the river.  Coincidentally, the man is one of the two men alleged to have raped the young woman.

The story is extremely well done weaving intrigue and mystery around the rape as well as the murder. But more importantly, we learn to understand the daily life of Martha not just as a midwife but as a wife, mother and someone of respect and standing in such a small community. It is her character rather than the murder which stays in my head. I felt a strong connection to her and that is a credit to the author who has managed to get inside the head of Martha. I grew to love her as well as her husband. They are the kind of couple you’d want to meet and get to know.

There were twists along the way and the writing is superb. The chill of winter permeated throughout with descriptions I could feel. The fury of unjust law and women’s rights were fed in between.

Yes, this one is a definite recommend especially if you like your historical fiction laced with mystery and intrigue.

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A missing man, a stolen baby and a plot of land where nothing grows. Are they connected? One person knows.

1948: Sugar Creek seemed such a welcoming town for Ellen, a young woman keen to share the news of her pregnancy with her fiancé Billy. When Billy signs up for extra work testing topical creams at the local military base, to earn money for their wedding, Ellen is nervous. Now it seems her fears were founded. Billy has disappeared. Devastated, Ellen begins to ask questions, turning the locals against her and putting her life at risk as she desperately searches for him.

2000: Instead of beginning her career with a dream job as a GP in a suburban practice, Dana has found herself jobless and facing the hospital board for a mistake she made with a patient. Herb Hipworth, mayor of Sugar Creek, is desperate for a town doctor and makes Dana an offer she can’t refuse. But when Dana arrives in the remote tropical town, she discovers the locals are plagued with unexplained health issues. Now, as she digs for the cause, she stumbles upon a decades-long conspiracy leading to an environmental disaster.

Book Review: Chai Time at Cinnamon Gardens by Shankari Chandran

This is a tough but essential read and very deserving of the Miles Franklin Literary Award in 2023.

Cinnamon Gardens Nursing Home is located in the western suburbs of Sydney and its residents and indeed owners have interesting histories peppered with secrets and trauma. The place is a home of safety and kindness and consideration, until it’s targeting by small mindedness.

The owner, Maya is herself a resident in her eighties having given up the running of it to her daughter Anja whose best friend Nikki is the home’s doctor. The author takes us into their lives, their past as well as their present. Maya’s beloved husband has disappeared and the trauma of her loss is never far away. Maya also harbours secrets to the outside world portraying herself as a white person when she is a Sri Lankan Tamil married to a Sri Lankan Muslim.

Chandran does a brilliant job to not just highlight and educate the reader about what it’s like to be a Tamil in Sri Lanka as well as Australia, but also shows us the brutality of war and the  stupidity of thinking behind racism together with the denial and destruction of culture by a majority over a minority. This is not only a repetitive historical trope but a real one that we witness today, right now. The Tamil language was forbidden back in the fifties, their land and culture denied which resulted in the recent Civil War.

Chandran also dissects white privilege thinking in Australia via her character Gareth who is married to Nikki. She explores media, mainstream and social where a story can go off course creating falsity and driving lies which leads to tragic consequences. Gareth is the instrumental vehicle and after lighting the ‘fire’ of racism, we don’t see him again. On reflection I preferred it that way.

It might be fiction but the themes are brutal, painful and uncomfortable. Chandran never lets you off the hook as the reader is forced to confront and consider and think.

The characters are well drawn and although there is a lot of them, you get to know them quickly.

A powerful book and a must read.

Book Review: Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

This was a wonderful book, short to read ( 63 pages as an ebook ), and it certainly packed a punch.

Set in a small town in Ireland in 1985, it centres around Bill Furlong, a coal merchant and family man. It’s Christmas week and one morning delivering coal to the local convent he’s confronted by a young woman locked in the coal room. Faced with a plausible explanation by the nuns he leaves, but is troubled. Confronted by his own past, the state of the woman bothers him. His eyes are also opened by the silent complicity of the town turning a blind eye to the goings on at the Convent.

The writing is sublime and the author does a wonderful job of placing us into the gloom of the economic woes of the time, painting a picture of the small town. We are taken into the everyday of Bill’s life as father of five girls and husband to pragmatic Eileen. But more importantly, the reader is also placed into Bill’s dilemma. What should he do? Should he probe further or trust his instincts?

The conversation with Eileen is illuminating.

“Where does thinking get us?” she said. “All thinking does is bring you down.” She was touching the little pearly buttons on her nightdress, agitated. “If you want to get on in life, there’s things you have to ignore, so you can keep on.”

I loved this one and it has certainly stayed with me. I’m not surprised it was shortlisted for the Booker in 2022.

Do yourself a favour and check this one out.

The Month that was…November 2023

What a jam-packed month, November was. I’m only just recovering from my daughter’s wedding extravaganza followed by the publication and launch of my latest book, Sugar Creek.

It was all nerves and anticipation when I turned up to The Bank, Carnegie where guests freely mingled inside and out. The temperature was mild and the rain held off. Some grabbed a meal and a drink before the formal part of the evening.

AJ Collins kindly and generously gave up her time to say some glowing words to launch the book before I got up and spoke. Of course once you get me started, it’s hard to stop. When it came to question time I was surprised by the interest with questions such as how long does it take to write a book to… is there another one?

Just in case you haven’t caught up about Sugar Creek, read the blurb below.

A missing man, a stolen baby and a plot of land where nothing grows. Are they connected? One person knows.

1948: Sugar Creek seemed such a welcoming town for Ellen, a young woman keen to share the news of her pregnancy with her fiancé Billy. When Billy signs up for extra work testing topical creams at the local military base, to earn money for their wedding, Ellen is nervous. Now it seems her fears were founded. Billy has disappeared. Devastated, Ellen begins to ask questions, turning the locals against her and putting her life at risk as she desperately searches for him.


2000: Instead of beginning her career with a dream job as a GP in a suburban practice, Dana has found herself jobless and facing the hospital board for a mistake she made with a patient. Herb Hipworth, mayor of Sugar Creek, is desperate for a town doctor and makes Dana an offer she can’t refuse. But when Dana arrives in the remote tropical town, she discovers the locals are plagued with unexplained health issues. Now, as she digs for the cause, she stumbles upon a decades-long conspiracy leading to an environmental disaster.

Sugar Creek is available on Amazon

What I’ve been watching…

I’ve launched back into the second season of Julia, the series about Julia Childs and it has inspired me to do a little more cooking…if only.

What I’ve been reading…

I’ve caught up a little on my reading so watch out next month for my reviews of these interesting and heart-felt novels.

Happy reading and writing everyone as we prepare for the festive season and the end of another big year.

Until next month…

Book Review: Horse by Geraldine Brooks

I love Geraldine Brooks writing and her latest novel, Horse did not disappoint.

This novel spans many years starting out in 1850’s Kentucky when enslaved Jarrett falls in love with a foal. The path of the horse crosses into New York in the 1950’s when a gallery owner obsesses about a painting of this same horse. Then we are drawn into Washington, 2019 when a young Nigerian-American art historian connects with an Australian scientist over the origin of the same horse which was declared as the greatest racing horse ever.

The timelines switch back and forwards but central is the true story of Lexington who was a record-breaking race horse. But it so much more than that as Brooks explores racism, slavery, science, and art.

It’s a beautifully crafted work, evoking a range of emotional responses from joy to horror to indignation. Indeed, the treatment of racism in the book is as relevant and powerful a story in the eighteen hundreds as it is today and Brooks draws the parallels brilliantly.

The only weak link for me was Catherine, the vet from England as her character didn’t ring true and she faded away anyway.

Otherwise, this book is brilliant, the research incredibly thorough. Read this one even if you don’t think you like horses.