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The Silent Stars Go By

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A beautiful, bittersweet WWI romance lights up an English village at Christmas with harrowing secrets, love lost and found, and the breathtaking power of forgiveness.

Vivid and achingly real, Sally Nicholls's latest historical romance explores the fallout from an unexpected pregnancy during the First World War. It's Christmastime, 1919. Three years before, seventeen-year-old Margot Allan, a respectable vicar's daughter, fell passionately in love. But she lost her fiancé, Harry, to the Great War. In turn, she gained a desperate secret, one with the power to ruin her life and her family's reputation, a secret she guards at all costs. Now Margot's family is gathering at the vicarage for the first time since the War ended. And Harry, it turns out, isn't dead. He's alive and well, and looking for answers. Can their love survive the truth? Based on the author's family history, this evocative and stirring exploration of the human and emotional side of war is young-adult historical fiction at its finest, written with the immediacy and understanding of the complexities of the human heart that are the hallmark of the author's work.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 11, 2022
      In Nicholls’s (All Fall Down) emotionally layered historical novel, set in 1919 after WWI, 19-year-old Margot Allen grapples with feelings of regret surrounding an unplanned pregnancy while navigating her family as they converge on their Yorkshire vicarage at Christmastime. When Margot was 16, her then-19-year-old fiancé Harry Singer went off to war; shortly thereafter, he was reported missing in action, and Margot discovered she was pregnant. To avoid social disgrace, she was secretly sent off to a mother-and-baby home to deliver her son, James, who was then raised by her parents and siblings as her brother. Now 19 and returning home from a secretarial course in Durham, Margot suffers from her vicar father’s disapproval, feels as if her internalized indignity alienates her from her tight knit siblings, and tries to avoid Harry, who survived as a POW before finally returning to Yorkshire. While Margot and Harry’s chemistry proves palpable, and their series of romantic misunderstandings provide tension, it’s Margot’s longing for James, the strain of her perceived shame, and her desire for forgiveness that underpins this deeply resonant post-war tale. All characters cue as white. Ages 14–up.

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  • English

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