Drumbeats (The Drumbeats Trilogy #1)
Book
It's 1965 and 18 year old Jess escapes her stifling English home for a gap year in Ghana, West...
Historical Mystery Romance
Hood (American Rebirth #1)
Book
Hood's life is gone. No more student loans, house parties, video games. The world is now a place of...
China Beach - Season 1
TV Show
Sand dunes and scalpels, surfboards and shrapnel, blue sea and red blood, R&R and CPR. Welcome to...
Vietnam war medical drama hospital nurse doctor history
Game of War - Fire Age
Games and Social Networking
App
Join the ULTIMATE battle for domination of the Kingdom in Game of War – Fire Age! PLAY FOR FREE in...
The Monsoon War: Young Officers Reminisce 1965 India-Pakistan War
Amarinder Singh and Tajindar Shergill
Book
When Pakistan first attacked in September 1965, the main objective of the GOC-in-C of the Western...
Gregor the Overlander (Underland Chronicles, #1)
Book
This irresistible first novel tells the story of a quiet boy who embarks on a dangerous quest in...
Bristol Country Buses
Book
The Bristol Tramways Company started operating buses in 1906 to feed traffic into their tram...
The Gendarme
Book
An extraordinarily haunting novel of identity and remembrance, love and forgiveness. Emet Conn is an...
Muskets and Minuets (Muskets Trilogy #1)
Book
Love. Politics. War. Amidst mounting tensions between the British crown and the American...
Young Adult Historical Fiction
ClareR (5726 KP) rated So Much Life Left Over in Books
Sep 8, 2018
So Much Life Left Over takes us back in to the lives of Rosie and Daniel Pitt after the First World War has come to an end. We go as far as Ceylon, back to London and to Germany in the 1930's. We catch up with all of the characters that we first encountered in The Dust That Falls From Dreams (and if you haven't read that yet, you're seriously missing out), and learn about what happens to Rosie's sisters, parents and those that they have met along the way.
I love the dialogue in this book: it's punchy, quick-witted and emotional. The first of Oily Wragge's chapters (each chapter, when about a different person, is written from their perspective, sometimes in first person, sometimes in third person - but I like this. It seems so personal) haunting, terribly sad and filled with the violence and horror of war and being a prisoner of war.
Daniel and Wragge go to work in Germany, and set up a business with the two fighter pilots that Daniel captured in the war. Here we get a look at the Germany of the early 1930's: the poverty, deprivation, and Hitlers rise to power. Daniel correctly predicts another war.
However, the truly heart wrenching events happen in the last thirty pages or so. I strongly suggest you get your handkerchief ready. The emotion in these last pages is what really makes this a truly stand out book for me (if the rest of the book hadn't already been enough to do that!). The sensitivity in the way that the subject matter is handled, and the emotions that this invokes in the reader is so well done.
I would thoroughly recommend this novel, I so enjoyed it, and I will be looking forward to the last part of this story.
Many thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and the author for the opportunity to read and review this book.