FINALLY. :)
I like how the events in the story coincide with the setting; during wartime, all the characters face many obstacles and worries. But after the war began to end, and had officially ended in England (D-day), all the characters find some sort of closure and resolve all their prominent worries. In the early chapters, there's a sense of conflict and tension, but coming to the end, there's more of a laid-back mood.
But mainly, I enjoyed how the perspective kept changing, so that we knew what each character was thinking.
- Work at the small-holding and the shop was slow in developing, and brought in close to no profit.
- Valerie and Ellen became close friends.
- Ellen gave birth to a girl, just as Valerie predicted, while Val had a girl too, unlike she predicted.
- Ellen's first worry about her marriage was relieved; Percy loved Sara just like his own daughter. She finally was able to confront her mom about her second worry, and Hilda was able to give Ellen helpful advice. This closed one of the gaps between Ellen and her mother.
- Billy, Sheila, Freddie, Mabel, and Jack came to visit Ellen and the others at the cottage. Horrified that Billy would realize that the child was his, Ellen was relieved to find that he didn't suspect it; this visit though also showed Ellen how different the two brothers were, with Billy being the rude and inconsiderate one.
- Percy and Ellen moved in to their own cottage.
- A woman who worked with Gertie was jealous of Gertie and Maureen, so she spread out rumors. When Gertie found out she fired the girl and solved the problem.
- Valerie, after hearing the gossip about Gertie and Maureen, knew what that could lead to and warned Ellen. In a hurry to tell Gertie, Ellen walked right into a car and Sara died as a result.
- Grief stricken, Ellen, as well as Percy, blamed herself for Sara's death. But after closing the gulf between them, they both learned to forgive her, Ellen taking more time to do so.
- Hilda broke her angel statue, once again disappointed to find that it hadn't protected them. She realized that their grief hadn't come from living in London, and that she shouldn't refer to inanimate objects for protection.
- Now with her daughter's death, Ellen needed to know more about what happens after death. She searched and searched, unable to find anything she could truly believe in. When finally, she gave up the search, planning to move on for the sake of her second child in her, Ellen went to Valerie to regain their friendship. In Valerie's living room, Ellen found peace knowing that there was an afterlife for her daughter.
QUESTION: What was the best thing about this novel to you?
I like how the events in the story coincide with the setting; during wartime, all the characters face many obstacles and worries. But after the war began to end, and had officially ended in England (D-day), all the characters find some sort of closure and resolve all their prominent worries. In the early chapters, there's a sense of conflict and tension, but coming to the end, there's more of a laid-back mood.
But mainly, I enjoyed how the perspective kept changing, so that we knew what each character was thinking.