The Distant Hours by Kate Morton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Edie Burchill is intrigued by her mother's emotional reaction to a letter, arriving 50 years after it was posted during World War II. Her mother, Meredith, has said little about being evacuated from London as a young teen, or her time with the Blythe sisters of Milderhurst Castle. Events bring Edie close to Milderhurst, and she cannot resist the temptation to look into the secrets and mysteries of the Blythes and this phase of her mother's life. This is a marvelous read if you appreciate intricate character study and tracing the interwoven threads of people's lives. The truth about these lives is seldom what it appears to be at first. Chapters alternate between points of view: Edie, Meredith,the three Blythe sisters, as well as alternating time periods: the present, the childhood years of the Blythes, the years of World War II, and a particular fateful night in 1941. Morton has penned another expansive novel that plumbs the depths of intertwined family history in a similar vein to her The Forgotten Garden.
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Thursday, December 30, 2010
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