Archive | July 2025

The Women by Kristen Hannah

Women Can Be Heroes Too

The Women by Kristen Hannah is one of those books whose impact will last forever. It is a book that will not fail to change you as your heart breaks for the women. It will affect your emotions as you feel disappointment, hurt and anger for the way the women are treated; as well as admiration for their bravery.

The Women follows a young woman who went to war as a newly qualified nurse, in Vietnam. She bonds with the only two other female nurses. It is a trio who will support each other for a lifetime as only they understand the horrors they lived through. The war in Vietnam was mainly a man’s war.

The Vietnam War started as war on communism but became more unpopular as the years rolled on. Many young American men and Vietnamese civilians lost their lives, and the American government did not always report the truth. “He told her repeatedly that the war was coming to an end. Walter Cronkite said the same… But it was still going on. And men were dying.” For the first time, people had the war beamed straight into their living rooms via the medium of television. The Vietnam War was a war that provoked many anti-war demonstrations.

The book is powerful. We watch Frankie evolve from a society teen to a brave young nurse. “Frankie had been taught to believe that her job was to be a good housewife, to raise well-mannered children and keep a lovely home.” Her view of life will be forever changed. “What’s it like?… Vietnam?”… “Words won’t help… I could talk all day about what it’s like and you still won’t be ready.” Frankie goes from innocence to experience after being totally unprepared for the horrors of war.

The role of nurses was important. Not only did they assist the doctors, they could perform life-saving treatments themselves. Sometimes their role was to hold the hand of the dying. The men who returned, never forgot the nurses who helped them. “There are men going home to their families because of us.”

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A Scottish Teashop In Napoli by Jane Lambert

Insieme Per Sempre (Together Forever)

A Scottish Teashop In Napoli by Jane Lambert is the most delightful contemporary novel that I thoroughly enjoyed.

All the characters were wonderfully warm and welcoming. They wrapped around the reader as we received a virtual hug in a book.

The novel opens in Scotland but we soon travel to Naples as a character has a complete change of life following a public jilting.

Scotland represents the past. Naples equals a new beginning. The scenery was bright and sunny. The characters opened their homes and their hearts to a young Scottish woman.

Throughout the novel, the reader’s taste buds are tempted to delicious sounding food fayre. I was pleased to find the inclusion of recipes at the back of the book.

Characters bond over food. The food ‘speaks’ of love. “Whenever Lucy baked, she could feel her grandmother beside her.” Her Grandmother introduced Lucy to her love of baking which became her passion.

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I Stand Amazed: The World As I See It vol 3 by Kirby Lee Davis

Stunningly Beautiful

I Stand Amazed: The World As I See It vol 3 by Kirby Lee Davis is a stunningly beautiful collection of poems and photos.

These poems celebrate our relationship with God. We see our need for Him every day; His faithfulness to us; grace and forgiveness.

As this book opens, there is a version of Isaiah 40.  This is followed by a poem based on John 3:16, declaring “For God loves, so He gives.” God gave His all for us. He gave us Jesus.

The poems My Everything, and My God Stands Ever At My Side speak of the faithfulness of God; and the presence of God. God is with us every single step as we journey through life.

Throughout the book, there are poems to help us through every stage of life.

In Why Go It Alone, a stanza repeats:

“Salvation’s knocking at your door,

Why go it alone?”

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The Paris Promise by Suzanne Kelman

The Torchbearers

The Paris Promise by Suzanne Kelman is a powerful dual timeline novel that totally consumed me. It is the third book in The Paris Sisters series but can be read as a stand-alone.

The action is set in Paris in 1943 and in England in 2012. We also journey to Brazil in the latter period. The stories are linked by family as a grandmother’s life becomes the focal point of a search.

Life in occupied Paris was hard, and even harder for the Jewish population. A young mother vows to relentlessly search for her Jewish husband. Only the hope of being re-united keeps her going as events push her to the limit.

We see that people did what they did in order to survive. “People made hard choices to survive.” The bravery of a young mother is to be applauded. “We can’t judge the past by our current standings.” The past needs to be viewed with a very different pair of eyes.

A Stradivarius violin links the two timelines as a granddaughter seeks to unite a family with their violin after the Nazis had looted it during the war. What she uncovers is the stuff of nightmares. “The violin wasn’t just an artefact – it was a bridge to her father’s history.”

Brave people of Paris joined the Resistance. “We must join them [Resistance]. We cannot stand idly by while our city is torn apart by hatred and fear.” We learn that even in the darkest of times, beauty can be found. “Amid all the darkness, there was still beauty to be found.”

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