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Showing posts with label Deborah Carr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deborah Carr. Show all posts

Friday, 25 March 2022

REVIEW: Mrs Boots Goes to War by Deborah Carr



Mrs Boots Goes to War (Mrs Boots #3) by Deborah Carr 
Genre: Historical fiction, WW1, Sagas, General fiction
Read: 24th March 2022
Published: 19th February 2021

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

The world is at war and her country needs her

When Florence’s son, John, announces that he has enlisted, she is horrified but determined to hold her family together during the oncoming hardships they are to face.

Men are returning to England wounded, with many more not returning at all, families are struggling, and Florence's ‘Dear Girls’ are risking their lives in new and dangerous jobs. Florence might be older now, but she has no intention of sitting back on her laurels while others fight for King and Country. She knows what needs to be done…


MY REVIEW:

It has been way too long since I read the first two books in the Mrs Boots series, "Mrs Boots" and "Mrs Boots of Pelham Street", but I soon picked up the story finding myself once against immersed within life with the Boots at St Heilers House in Nottingham. 

The first book introduces a young Florence Rowe on the island of Jersey where she was born and grew up working and living above her father's stationery shop, before meeting Jesse Boot. The couple marry against her mother's staunch wishes, as she did not want to see Florence tied to an older husband and ultimately becoming his nursemaid. But the marriage of Florence and Jesse was the beginning of the Boots pharmaceutical empire that Britons still know and enjoy today. The second book expands on their growing empire as well as their family which sees them move to a much bigger house which they name St Heilers, in honour of Florence's roots on Jersey. The growth of their business sees them opening more stores with Pelham Street being their main base. Now in this third installment MRS BOOTS GOES TO WAR, a new challenge meets Florence and her family with the onslaught of the Great War.

Seven years prior, Jesse had been knighted for his service as a businessman with his expanding empire, and Florence was therefore now known as Lady Boot. Now the year is 1913, the old Queen Victoria has passed in 1901 as has her successor King Edward VII in 1910 and now King George V reigns. Tensions are rising in Europe with rumbles of a war in their midst whilst Florence and Jesse welcome the marriage of their eldest daughter Dorothy to Captain Wilfrid Bruce. By the time September 1914 has come around, war has broken out and Florence is shocked to learn her only son John has enlisted and is being sent to France just four weeks after his marriage to wife Margaret.

Meanwhile their youngest daughter Margery is restless after both her older siblings have married and in light of both her sister and sister in law expecting their first children. Margery had contemplated joining the suffrage movement prior to the war and wanted to make a difference to others in life, thus leading her to announce her determination to go to Northern France to help in her own way with the war effort. Florence now has to resign herself that two of her children will be so close to the Front, where danger is most imminent. But it's where she feels she can truly make a difference. After all, that is how Florence and Jesse raised their children.

At home in Nottingham, Florence finds herself dealing with many of "her dear girls", as she always thinks of them, handing in their notice with the lure of higher wages being offered in the nearby munitions factory. She has heard of the "canary girls", so nicknamed for the yellow pallor of their skin handling such toxic chemicals causes. However, the work is extremely dangerous and Florence can't help but fear for the young girls who leave her employ to take on such perilous work for a few extra shillings. But then she remembers that these girls are from working class families and every extra they can earn helps. Even so, Florence continues to help out the families of her employees in any way that she can throughout the difficult times they are all facing.

At the news of the alarming gas attacks inflicted on their men in France, Jesse came up with the idea of producing some kind of gas mask to help their men if ever they come under further attacks. This leads to the production of many other items they can offer the men at the Front. In this way, Jesse and Florence feel they at Boots are doing their own bit for the war effort with the people they employ to manufacture these products also.

With all the changes, Florence continues to remain positive despite and help others where she can, despite her own fears for her children. When the war begins to come a little too close to home with Zeppelin raids over the country, it seems only a matter of time when tragedy will strike someone close to them. For a war that everyone would be over by Christmas that first year, it just seems to continue throughout the coming years with no end in sight thus plummeting those left at home into despair. Florence does her level best to remain positive though it is tough. Her one shining light, besides her work with the Boots empire, is her grandchildren and the delight they bring her whenever she sees them with Jesse being her strength.

Together, Florence and Jesse are stalwarts in their partnership, going from strength to strength as their empire booms despite the decimating war in Europe. As a woman, Florence was many years ahead of her time and other women, a philanthropist in her own right with a partnership that was unique bringing a pharmaceutical empire to the forefront of a nation who still enjoy it today.

Based on the actual story behind the Boots empire, MRS BOOTS GOES TO WAR continues where the other two books left off and taking readers into a much darker time for Britons and for Florence and Jesse themselves. In this third book, Jesse is far more infirm than he has been previously with his health having deteriorated to the point he was physically limited in his capabilities. But his handicap did not stop him from continuing with the Boots empire. And as there was no mention in the Author's Note at the end, I have to wonder is there to be a further chapter to the Boots story? As Jesse lives a further decade and thensome after the end of this book...with Florence seeing yet another war come and go, another two Kings come and go, almost reaching her ninth decade herself. I would love to read more of Florence and her family, as I feel though this is a fitting end there is still more to be told.

There was more than one occasion I found myself getting a little emotional and shedding a few tears, as is usually the case when the senseless act of war is concerned. But what touches me most is the strength of the family unit Florence and Jesse have built within their children as well as in their stores and factories.

MRS BOOTS GOES TO WAR is well written and incredibly well researched that I was captivated from the very beginning. The author really brings each of the characters to life as well as the period itself. I felt as if I was living through WW1 myself it felt that real. It is also interesting to draw the parallels between the onset of the Spanish flu at the end of the war with our own pandemic we face today.

Whilst this is a series, MRS BOOTS GOES TO WAR can suffice as a standalone if you haven't read the other books. But to appreciate it in its entirety, I thoroughly recommend going back to where it all began...when Florence was a shop girl in Jersey and meets a man thirteen years her senior who comes to the island for his health. And the rest, they say is history. 

I absolutely love this series and, while I hope for more of Florence and Jesse, this one does offer a fitting end should the series finish here. MRS BOOTS GOES TO WAR is a thoroughly enjoyable read that was light and easy that is emotive and inspiring. I have no hesitation in recommending to anyone who enjoys historical fiction.

I would like to thank #DeborahCarr, #Netgalley, #OneMoreChapter for an ARC of #MrsBootsGoesToWar in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Deborah Carr was born on the island of Jersey and writes historical novels under her own name. Her First World War historical romance, Broken Faces was runner-up in the 2012 Good Housekeeping Novel Writing Competition and received a ‘special commendation’ in the Harry Bowling Prize. In 2017, she was commissioned to write The Poppy Field to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War.

Deborah's historical novels have a connection to Jersey, Channel Islands where she lives. Her latest book, An Island At War recently became a USA Today Besteller and is set in Jersey during The Occupation which took place when the German forces invaded the island in the summer of 1940 until liberation on 9th May 1945. Her Mrs Boots series is inspired by Jersey woman Florence Boot, the woman behind the Boots empire. Mrs Boots (Book 1), Mrs Boots of Pelham Street (Book 2), and Mrs Boots Goes To War (Book 3). Deborah is hoping to be able to announce two further standalone novels coming soon from One More Chapter.

Deborah also writes contemporary romance series as Georgina Troy, signing up to the Romantic Novelist’s Association New Writers’ Scheme in 2005 and became a full member when A Jersey Kiss was published. This book is the first book in her Jersey Scene series and was a finalist in the Joan Hessayon Award for New Writers 2015 and Contemporary Romance Category, Romantic Novel of the Year Awards 2016 (RoNAs). Her second four-book series, also set in Jersey is The Boardwalk by the Sea. She also recently signed with the brilliant Boldwood Books who will be bringing out the first books in her new Sunshine Island series, Finding Love on Sunshine Island in May 2022.

As if that wasn't enough, Deborah has also written two psychological suspense novels for Hera Books as Ella Drummond. My Last Lie and The Darkest Summer are out now in e-book and audio book.

Deborah has lived most of her life on the island of Jersey where she now lives a few minutes from the beach with her husband and three adorable but noisy dogs.
 
Social Media links:


Sunday, 17 May 2020

REVIEW: Mrs Boots of Pelham Street by Deborah Carr (ARC)


Mrs Boots of Pelham Street (Mrs Boots #2) by Deborah Carr
Genre: Historical fiction, General Fiction
Read: 16th May 2020
Purchase: Amazon
(publication date: 15th May 2020)

★★★★ 4 stars

Easing myself back into reading after surgery, developing clots and now recovering, I thought I would lose myself to some delightful historical fiction. I thoroughly enjoyed the first book "Mrs Boots" and decided to jump right into this one.

MRS BOOTS OF PELHAM STREET begins in 1891, six years after Florence and Jesse Boot married on the island of Jersey and they are now living in Nottingham working on building both their family and the Boots empire. They have two children, two year old John and nine month old Dorothy. But Florence feels the need to increase her brood and confides in Jesse that they should have another child.

Fast forward a year later in 1892 and Florence is pregnant with her third child whilst continuing to work in their Boots stores. Jesse implores her to take it easy as the pregnancy tires her while at the same time Florence tries to get Jesse to slow down due to his growing ailments. Neither of them wish to as they continue to build their growing empire. Then in the midst of her seventh month of pregnancy, Jesse announced that he had bought them a majestic house in the beautiful and sprawling The Park estate and named it in honour of her hometown on Jersey, St Heliers. Of course the last thing Florence wished to be doing at seven months pregnant was move house, but with another baby on the way the move made sense. Baby Margery was born on a night they were visiting old friends, keeping Florence bedridden for some ten days before she was able to go back home...and even longer before she could return to work at Boots.

Life had changed for Florence since her days living on Jersey with her family. She had always been an independent young woman, wanting both a career and a family and never losing sight of what she wants from life...but can she fit it all in?

When Jesse buys a massive floorspace on Pelham Street, Florence sees a chance to expand the chain into other departments. But Jesse is adamant. Boots is and always will be first and foremost, a chemist. But Florence has an eye for things that would draw a customer into their store who might never enter and the lure of gifts and pretty things is just the ticket. When that proves successful, Florence decides to expand into stationery and book lending...but all the while Jesse still feels that Boots should remain a chemist. Stubborn to the core, Florence and Jesse butt heads a number of times throughout the course of building up Boots from sixty stores into two hundred and fifty.

One thing Jesse has given his wife full control over is the female staff. She has made it her mission to help the women less fortunate than herself by giving them positions within one of their many Boots stores. Of course she would love to help them all, but of course that isn't possible. Her mind often wanders back to Jersey and young teenage Lily Buttons, whom she had taken off the street and given a job in her father's stationer's store. Lily was her success story and she was proud to have had a hand in helping the young woman find her feet.

So when her secretary announces that there is a Miss Lily Buttons who wishes to see her, Florence couldn't believe her eyes or her ears. Lily had handed in her notice at her father's store and had saved every penny to come to Nottingham to make something of herself. And she hoped Florence had a position for her in one of her stores. Florence was thrilled and promptly gave Lily a supervisory position within the Pelham Street store.

Jesse's health continues to decline but he refuses to slow down. A workaholic, he says he must work and as the head of the Boots empire it is up to him to continue to make it work. When he has a sudden health scare, Florence hopes he would take this as a sign that he must slow down but all that ensues is an even grumpier old man who cannot do all he used to do.

Florence continues to be a stalwart for the company and for women, as she organises outings for several hundred female employees, Christmas gifts for them women and gifts for those who are struggling to make ends meet. She gives positions to those who need it most and takes the women under her wing, hoping to help make their lives better. Despite her mother's pleading and against her wishes, Florence continues to work and take her children to the office with her when they are young so that she can be both a working woman and a hands-on mother for her children. This is very forward thinking for the time particularly as women didn't work once they married or had children, staying at home instead with their family.

However with the number of Boots stores opening up across the country, the empire continues to grow at a rapid rate and fast becoming more than just a chemist, but a gift shop as well. Then they began their own printing means to reduce the need to outsource which was incredibly progressive for the time.

The scenes at Florence and Jesse's home amidst their children and servants had echoes of Downton Abbey, though not as much a grand scale. It had that warmth and homeliness about it despite being a majestic house with half a dozen servants. And their loyalty and appreciation to their servants reminded me those that had graced the halls of Downton.

I really enjoyed this second installment of the Boots empire, though admittedly not as much as the first. I think my biggest issue was with Jesse and his constant grumpiness which was so at odds with the man we met in the first book. Also his stubbornness regarding his children, particularly John, and their education contradicted his acceptance of Florence's position as an independent woman. Contrary to that forward notion, the one regarding John's education was completely belied his position as a forward-thinking man.

But Florence annoyed me in the beginning also when she demanded to remain independent, working at Boots whilst bringing up three children. When Jesse implored her to let him know if it ever became too much to let him know, she silently promised herself she would do no such thing. And then, she had the audacity to plead with Jesse to slow down whilst silently watching him for signs of pain when she decided he would need to slow down. I thought that to be somewhat hypocritical when she endeavoured to do the complete opposite herself. Did their children's well being mean nothing to them that they would both risk their health for the sake of being independent?

Aside from those little niggles, I did find a couple discrepancies in the plot and its timeline. Firstly, in April 1893 Florence was taking her three children to the office and alluded to Margery being just six months old...which was entirely incorrect as Margery was born in April 1892, making her 12 months old. The second inconsistency I found was with regards to Florence's family. She made mention of her own brother Willie. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I honestly do not recall her ever having a brother - just two sisters, Adelaide and Amy. Had she had a brother, wouldn't he have been the most likely to work alongside her father at Rowe's stationers rather than Florence herself and her sister Amy?

Niggles and inconsistencies aside (though I felt I did have to mention them), MRS BOOTS OF PELHAM STREET is a lovely gentle read of times past and while it is the second in the series, it could be read as a standalone.

By the end of the book, they have entered a new century with the year now 1907 and Florence and Jesse are now celebrating twenty one years of marriage. I wonder, where do they go from here? Is there a third book to come to continue their story? I hope so as I would thoroughly enjoy revisiting the Boot family and their growing empire.

A wonderful nod to what has become one of the UK's biggest chemist chains, MRS BOOTS OF PELHAM STREET is an enjoyable step back in time, along with the first in the series "Mrs Boots".

I would like to thank #DeborahCarr, #NetGalley and #OneMoreChapter and #HarperCollinsUK for an ARC of #MrsBootsOfPelhamStreet in exchange for an honest review.

Sunday, 5 April 2020

REVIEW: Mrs Boots by Deborah Carr (ARC)


Mrs Boots (Mrs Boots #1) by Deborah Carr
Genre: Historical fiction
Read: 4th April 2020
Purchase: Amazon
(publication date: 27th March 2020)

★★★★★ 5 stars

The first book in a wonderful new series, MRS BOOTS by Deborah Carr is inspired by the life of Florence Boot, the woman behind the UK's favourite chemist. It's not a history of the Boots empire but rather the beginning of a promising story.

Jersey, 1885: Florence Rowe is 23 and lives on the channel island of Jersey with her family. The daughter of a successful shop W.H. Rowe Stationers, she and her sister Amy are assistants in the family run business. A self-confident independent young woman, Florence has no intentions of ever marrying and being under the dictatorship of a man. She intends to make her own mark on the world with ambitions of owning her own shop one day.

But then she meets Jesse Boot.

Jesse is on holiday on the island of Jersey when he is invited to tea one afternoon with the Rowes in their flat above the shop. A successful man in his own right, Jesse owns and runs a string of shops on the mainland in Nottingham and has only recently branched out and employed a chemist. He had shared the responsibility with his mother until her recent death, selling herbs for various ailments which she had procured and dried herself. His sister Jane, having visited the island previously, recommended he visit to take in its sheer beauty and to call on the Rowe's who had made her stay a pleasant one.

Florence's father had spoken of Jesse to his family but she hadn't taken much notice, having no interest in marriage but rather the important matters of running the shop instead. So when introduced to Jesse, she didn't expect to feel the reaction she did. The flutter in her stomach, the twinkle in his eyes, the flush of her face.

Over the coming days, Florence is tasked with showing Jesse the marvels of their island and in doing so the two find themselves sharing a camaraderie unfamiliar to them. Despite being a small island, the vast differences between the town and the coast is striking. Jesse finds himself drawn to its wonder and enamoured with his guide.

Florence has never experienced the feelings she now does but finds herself looking forward to her outings with Jesse and being in his company again. He is not like any man she has encountered before. He listens to her, encourages her and sees her as an equal rather than someone to kowtow to his whims. Together they enjoy a friendly banter and discussions about important matters, rather than trivialities.

Suddenly Florence, who never saw a need to marry, finds herself falling in love with Jesse and he with her, despite their twelve year age difference. Then when Jesse seeks her father to ask for her hand, the couple are overjoyed that permission is granted. However, neither of them foresaw Florence's mother's reaction, who flatly refuses the union and convinces her father to rescind his permission.

Instead, Jesse is to return to Nottingham and the two are permitted to continue their courtship via letter for a further ten months until the following summer in the hope that they would both reconsider their decision. But Florence and Jesse know their own minds and their hearts and the woman who vowed never to marry, now longs to marry the man she so truly loves.

However, they are restricted to writing and with every letter they confide in each other, growing closer and develop a love and respect that only deepened. Florence sought Jesse's advice with her ideas in implementing changes in the shop to helping those less fortunate. It's then that she soon discovers that she values Jesse's thoughts when seeking his opinion on things that trouble her. Just as he values hers.

It's then one day when a bedraggled young girl comes running into the open door of their shop to escape the angry man pursuing her, that Florence sees something in her frightened eyes. Lily Buttons comes from the poorer side of town, living hand to mouth with a father often in the local jail. But Florence soon learns that Lily has dreams...and potential. It just needs nurturing. Realising she has opportunity where others have none, Florence desires to make a difference in the life of others. An attribute Jesse admires in her.

Their love story and courtship is a sweet and hopeful story. And despite a year of separation when their love is tested, it is clear that their love will survive and all will end happily. Or will it? Will Florence's father grant his permission after the year has passed? Will her mother finally accept Jesse as her choice in husband and give her blessing?

Set in the Victorian era of the late 1800s, a time when the opinion of a woman wasn't permitted, where parent's wishes were obeyed and respected and social expectations were strictly adhered to, MRS BOOTS is like a breath of fresh air. It is captivating and romantic and I devoured it long into the night.

A gentle romance, MRS BOOTS is an easy read with an upbeat feel that is engaging and delightful. Some reviewers have said that they found the pace slow but not me. I was enthralled from beginning to end and couldn't put it down. For me, the pace was perfect. It was like a gentle stroll in the park with that feel of anticipation building fit to burst at times. It was the excitement felt in a courtship that just leaves you wanting more. It was perfect.

With the fabulous setting, the background, the supporting characters and the gentle romance between Florence and Jesse, MRS BOOTS is a beautiful captivating story I thoroughly enjoyed from start to finish.

I have no hesitation in recommending it to lovers of historical fiction and I cannot wait for the second in this wonderful series "Mrs Boots of Pelham Street" released in May 2020.

I would like to thank #DeborahCarr, #NetGalley and #HarperCollins and #OneMoreChapter for an ARC of #MrsBoots in exchange for an honest review.