Here are 2 books that Lolly Willowes fans have personally recommended if you like
Lolly Willowes.
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My choices this year are all connected with war. Susan Hill is also the author of The Woman in Black, a scary ghost story which I couldn’t put down, and which was – perhaps still is – a terrifying theatrical experience (apparently – I haven’t dared see it).
She wrote Strange Meeting as a very young woman. It is a graphic account of being a young English officer on the front line during the First World War. No detail is spared. We are down the trenches, then, after an anguished wait, "over the top," to where the enemy waits to mow the soldiers down…
You can feel the agony, sometimes physical, always mental, that stays with them day and night. The horrors are almost worse in that the characters have strong feelings for each other. The heroes, two young officers, love each other deeply and tenderly (though completely platonically),…
Susan Hill's classic novel Strange Meeting tells of the power of love amidst atrocities.
'He was afraid to go to sleep. For three weeks, he had been afraid of going to sleep . . .'
Young officer John Hilliard returns to his battalion in France following a period of sick leave in England. Despite having trouble adjusting to all the new faces, the stiff and reserved Hilliard forms a friendship with David Barton, an open and cheerful new recruit who has still to be bloodied in battle. As the pair approach the front line, to the proximity of death and…
It is April 1st, 2038. Day 60 of China's blockade of the rebel island of Taiwan.
The US government has agreed to provide Taiwan with a weapons system so advanced that it can disrupt the balance of power in the region. But what pilot would be crazy enough to run…
My third choice is again a war book. This time it confronts us, from a woman’s side, with the horrors of the German occupation of France in 1940, the sadistic torture of French Resistance fighters, the misery of a woman’s life in a concentration camp, and the problems awaiting those war women who finally make it back to France.
The heroine of this true story is the sister of Christian Dior, Catherine, whose incredible courage takes her through being deliberately half-drowned by the Nazis, half-starved when deported, and finally returned to France, where she slowly recovers, lives quietly in the country, grows wonderful roses, and becomes the inspiration for the famous Dior scent, "Miss Dior."
Difficult and rewarding to read, and the result of years of research by the author.
The overdue restoration of Catherine Dior's extraordinary life, from her brother's muse to Holocaust survivor
When the French designer Christian Dior presented his first collection in Paris in 1947, he changed fashion forever. Dior's “New Look” created a striking, romantic vision of femininity, luxury, and grace, making him―and his last name―famous overnight. One woman informed Dior's vision more than any other: his sister, Catherine, a Resistance fighter, concentration camp survivor, and cultivator of rose gardens who inspired Dior's most beloved fragrance, Miss Dior. Yet the story of Catherine's remarkable life―so different from her famous brother's―has never…