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The Broken Vow by Luisa A. Jones
Published: 22nd January 2024
Showing posts with label Goswell Quartet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goswell Quartet. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 November 2022

REVIEW: The Widow's Secret by Kate Hewitt



The Widow's Secret (The Goswell Quartet #4) by Kate Hewitt
Genre: Historical fiction, Dual timeline, Contemporary fiction, Georgian era
Read: 16th November 2022
Published: 17th November 2022

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

She looked down at the sweet little girl and knew she wouldn’t listen to what anyone else said. She had to do what was right. Even if it meant going against everything she was taught to believe and keeping a secret from the person closest to her…

England, 1766: Abigail is happily married to James, a tobacco trader turned sea captain, and is looking forward to starting a family and settling down in Whitehaven, deep in the Lake District. But after a series of devastating losses, she finds herself in turmoil, with her future suddenly seeming unknown…

When James announces that he will captain a ship to Africa and then the Americas for a year, it sparks a series of surprising and heartbreaking events – involving some of the darkest evils in humanity’s history, and a tiny, terrified slave girl who’s brought back to England. This helpless child forces Abigail to reconsider everything she thought she knew – and will change her life forever…

Now: When a shipwreck is discovered off the coast of Cumbria, local expert Rachel is brought in to investigate. Her first thought is that this will be a perfect distraction from her troubled marriage and the memories of her past that she is desperate not to think about. But then it becomes clear the wreck is a slaving ship from the 1700s – one that was recorded as sinking in the Caribbean – and Rachel begins to wonder if there’s more to this terrible mystery than meets the eye.

Faced with uncertainty about both the past and present, can Rachel learn from Abigail’s extraordinary story and take the first step towards a brighter future of her own?

The Widow’s Secret is a completely heart-wrenching and powerful story of courage, redemption, and compassion. Fans of Lucinda Riley, Barbara O’Neal and Fiona Valpy will be absolutely captivated by this unforgettable read.

This novel can be enjoyed as a standalone.

Previously published as The Widow’s Secret by Katharine Swartz.


EXTRACT: 

Georgiana let out a gay laugh and clapped her hands. "What can she do? Does she speak?"

"Of course she speaks," Abigail answered stiffly. "She has learned English remarkably well."

"How clever of her! In any case I am quite looking forward to having a page and dressing him in a frock coat and frills. How handsome he will look! Mr Fenton said he would find me a healthy, well turned out little lad for me. I am quite depending on him."

"I do not know know how he will find such a creature," Abigail said before she could think better of it, "when he will have endured the kind of voyage no human being ever should."

"Why, Abigail, you sound almost like one of those abolitionists," Georgiana answered with a laugh. "And with your husband in the trade."

She pressed her lips together. "Well I know it."

"Surely you are not getting such ideas? It would be most unsuitable. Besides, we cannot do without the trade. All of society rests on it." With a little laugh she gestured to the loaf of sugar that had been brought in with the tea tray. "There would be none of this without them, you know."

"Then perhaps we should go without sugar in our tea," Abigail said recklessly. "I daresay it would not be such a sacrifice."

"And what of the trade? The profit?" Georgiana replied with an irritable laugh. "Really Abigail, you are too much. I thought you would amuse me today, with your little lady's maid, but I am quite put out."

"I am so sorry to disappoint you," Abigail returned with acid in her voice.

"What does she do?" Georgiana asked petulantly. "Can you make her say something?"

"No, I cannot." Abigail found herself shaking with rage. "She is not a puppet, or a pet, or a plaything. She is a person."



MY THOUGHTS:

I am excited to be taking part in the #BooksOnTour #BlogTour for Kate Hewitt's delightful dual timeline tale THE WIDOW'S SECRET.

I really didn't think I would enjoy this final installment of the Goswell Quartet as the subject matter - shipwrecks and maritime whatnot - is not something I would normally have picked up to read. However, I have been proved pleasantly wrong. I enjoyed THE WIDOW'S SECRET far more than I ever thought I would and I am saddened to have to say goodbye to Goswell and Jane, who has been a stalwart throughout all four books.

As with each tale, this one delves even further back than the previous three as we venture into the 18th century and the world of merchant ships and the slave trade.

Whitehaven, 1762: After a a rather dubious entanglement in Harrogate, 19 year old Abigail Heywood is sure her prospects for a husband have all but disappeared within the whispers of society's gossips. And then she meets 33 year old James Fenton, a former sea captain and now maritime trader in tobacco. He has no interest in the gossips and thinks only on the lovely Abigail Heywood, despite her plain looks and yet he finds her attractive in an innocent and wholesome way. Within months he proposes and they marry, moving to the beautiful town house he has procured for them. But after more than a year, Abigail has been unable to bear him a son...or any child, for that matter.

But with every tobacco plant and every shipment bound for Glasgow, James must find another source in which to trade...and he soon finds that the slave trade is proving to be rather profitable. Procured in Africa, the ship then sails to the Caribbean where they trade the slaves for sugar, thus sailing back to Cumbria with a haul to pay off the investors as well as make a profit themselves. A profitable business, by all accounts.

One one such voyage, James returns with a surprise for Abigail. Her very own slave, her small hands manacled! Abigail is shocked. The creature before her couldn't be more than six years old, if that! She speaks not a word of English (just heathen gibberish) and her skin is as dark as anything she has ever seen. She takes the young girl home and orders her maid to fill a bath of hot water for the child as she bathes her emaciated and scarred body. Who would do this to a child? And yet, when her husband returns home, he argues that the child is to sleep on the dark warehouse floor and to remain manacled until she learns her place.

And then when James announces that he is to sail on the next voyage since his captain failed to procure enough slaves so he will see to it himself. He will be gone for more than a year by the time he has solicited enough slaves from the Africas and journeyed to the Caribbean to trade them for goods that he will bring back home. 

During the time her husband has been gone, Abigail meets and listens to John Wesley and his teachings and thus begins to learn a lot more about herself and her husband...and the situation in which she now finds herself. She also comes to see Adelaide, as she now calls the child, as more than a slave...more than a servant even...but something akin to a daughter. 

But society will never accept an African child...and neither would James, Abigail fears.

Present day: Maritime archaeologist Rachel Gardener is called up to look into the remains of a possible shipwreck off the Cumbrian coast. Leaving her husband behind in Bristol, she makes the five hour journey to Whitehaven and this exciting possible find. But Rachel is no stranger to the Lake District for she grew up about an hour away and where her mother still lives, though they barely talk having a somewhat prickly relationship.

During a dive to investigate the site, Rachel and her colleagues find a pocket watch with the engraving "JMF" and soon discovers an 18th century merchant trader with those initials whose ship was reportedly wrecked off the coast of Antigua in the Caribbean. So why was his pocket watch found within this wreck just a quarter of a mile out of Whitehaven? And so close to home?

Her investigations lead her to James and Abigail Fenton as she tries to unravel the mystery of who they were and what their roles were in the slave trade? She meets and befriends Jane Hatton (from the previous books) who is an ear for Rachel to offload her worries as well as her findings into the Fentons. For Jane, too, is understandably as intrigued.

Her enquiries are then paused when she receives a call about her mother who has had a fall and is in hospital. But it seems not everything is as it seems and Rachel must deal with an even further blow, wondering how she is going to handle everything from her mother to her marriage.

THE WIDOW'S SECRET is a little different from the first three in that it is not actually set in Goswell, though it does feature. I couldn't warm to Rachel who I found standoffish and aloof, and there are times I could have gladly knocked her and her mother's heads together. The heroine of this tale is most certainly Abigail. She was loyal, kind and somewhat forward thinking for the time. She knew in her heart that slavery was wrong and hated the very thought of treating Adelaide as nothing but a savage creature who behaved like a heathen, could speak nothing but gibberish and could very murder her in her sleep! She refused to see her that way and her relationship with Adelaide was a heartwarming one.

I thoroughly enjoyed this tale far more than I expected to and I am saddened to leave the residents - past and present - of Goswell behind as this beautiful series comes to an end. I have enjoyed every minute of my time with everyone, getting to know them and seeing them blossom. And I loved the mysteries each of the characters were faced with. I am so glad I met them all. And I thank Kate Hewitt for the opportunity.

Overall, though not an entirely easy read in parts, THE WIDOW'S SECRET is perfect for fans of dual timelines.

I would like to thank #KateHewitt, #NetGalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #TheWidowsSecret in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Kate Hewitt is the author of many romance and women’s fiction novels. A former New Yorker and now an American ex-pat, she lives in a small town on the Welsh border with her husband, five children, and their overly affectionate Golden Retriever. Whatever the genre, she enjoys telling stories that tackle real issues and touch people’s lives.

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:

Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Bookouture by following them on these social media accounts.


REVIEW: The Bride's Sister by Kate Hewitt



The Bride's Sister (The Goswell Quartet #3) by Kate Hewitt
Genre: Historical fiction, Contemporary fiction, Dual timeline, Victorian era
Read: 14th November 2022
Published: 17th November 2022

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

She clutched the piece of paper close to her chest, tears welling in her eyes, hardly believing what she had read. Silently thanking Sarah for all she sacrificed, she took the death certificate and slipped it under a loose floorboard – no one must ever find out what she’d done…

England, 1868: Orphaned and penniless, 18-year-old Sarah is left the sole guardian of her beloved little sister Lucy – who she’s vowed to protect at all costs. With nowhere left to turn, she is forced to accept mysterious widower James Mills’ proposal of marriage.

She believes being his bride can’t possibly be as bad as the threat of the workhouse. But nothing prepares her for the darkness of her marriage, the shocking secrets of her new family and the lengths she will have to go to, to keep her sister safe…

Now: Living in the beautiful village of Goswell, Ellen believes her family life to be idyllic… until her estranged seventeen-year-old stepdaughter Annabelle moves in and shatters the peace. Ellen fears they will never bond, until she finds a death certificate – for a woman named Sarah, from over a century earlier – hidden under the floorboards of their house, and Annabelle starts to help her unravel the mystery.

Yet as Ellen and Annabelle dig deeper into Sarah’s life and death, shocking truths, both past and present, come to light which change everything Ellen thought she knew about Sarah’s family – and the new addition to her own…

The Bride’s Sister is a powerful and moving story about what it means to be a family, second chances, and the lengths we go to for those we love. Fans of Lucinda Riley, Barbara O’Neal and Fiona Valpy will absolutely love this gripping and emotional read.

This novel can be enjoyed as a standalone.

Previously published as The Second Bride by Katharine Swartz.


MY THOUGHTS:

I am excited to be taking part in the #BooksOnTour #BlogTour for Kate Hewitt's delightful dual timeline tale THE BRIDE'S SISTER.

It began with a death certificate under the floorboards...
Sarah Mills. River Cottage, Kendal. General debility. July 1872.

Kendal, 1868: Eighteen year old Sarah and her ten year old mute sister Lucy step off the train after the long journey from Goswell. Having been left orphaned after the death of their mother, they find themselves in the strange town awaiting the aunt they have never met. Edith was their mother's sister but for reasons unknown to the girls, they never spoke again after their mother met and married their father, a curate in Goswell.

Aunt Edith is a stern and strict figure, though not unkind. She takes the girls in, feeds them generous meals, gives them a roof over their heads and clothes them. She does not believe in idle hands and keeps the sabbath holy. But when a sudden tragedy occurs, leaving Sarah and Lucy destitute, an offer of marriage to a friend of her late father's gives the girls the prospect of a home in which they are cared for.

But marriage to James Mills is not without its problems. It seems he does not really want a wife but an unpaid skivvy, which is what Sarah and Lucy become. His 14 year old daughter Clara who parades herself about town in all manner of colourful flounces of gowns, totally inappropriate for a girl her age, incredibly spoilt having been the only child of her husband and his late wife. Clara makes life difficult for Sarah and her sister Lucy, whose bed is now a pile of blankets on the kitchen floor, like a servant.

Then when Clara finds herself in a position of disgrace, it's Sarah she comes to begging her for help. And so she does. But when James discovers the subterfuge, his wrath is such that he all but destroys Sarah.

Goswell, present day: During renovations of an upstairs attic room, builders comes across a piece of paper hidden under the floorboards. Ellen is intrigued by the mystery behind the words:

"Sarah Mills. River Cottage, Kendal. General debility. July 1872."

Who was Sarah Mills? And if she lived and died in Kendal, what was her death certificate doing hidden under the floorboards of her house here in Goswell? And what on earth does general debility mean? Ellen begins initial enquiries which are quickly abandoned when when her husband Alex, who she describes as having the emotion intelligence of a hermit crab, announces that his his ex wife contacted him asking that they take his 17 year old daughter Annabelle in for a year while she does her final year of A levels, as she jetsets off to New York.

Ellen is dubious. Past experiences with Annabelle have not been pleasant and in the ten years since she has seen her, she fears it will not be different. But she makes an effort and relinquishes the room she has waited twelve years for to make room for Annabelle...who is anything but grateful. The teenager is rude, truculent with an uncompromising attitude. She gives the greatest death stare than anyone Ellen knows. And nothing she does is right.

In an attempt to remain positive, Ellen coaxes the spoilt madam into a little project she had all but forgotten in the busyness and upheaval of their lives created by Annabelle's arrival. The mystery of Sarah Mills and who she was and why her death certificate was found under the floorboards of the room that is now Annabelle's. The teenager shows some interest and Ellen hopes this could go some way to extending a kind of olive branch to the girl.

But is it enough?

THE BRIDE'S SISTER is a deeply heartbreaking tale that will certainly tug at your heartstrings. The Victorian timeline is especially difficult and uneasy, just as times were, and your heart just goes out to the young Sarah and her little sister Lucy who is so obviously autistic (a condition not known about in those days let alone tolerated). Lucy was slated as an "imbecile" and yet she was intelligent and understood everything, her communication silent and her hatred of being touched. The story surrounding Sarah and her sister was incredibly heartbreaking. Life was unkind to those without any means as well as to those who were different in any way, as Lucy was. The lengths to which Sarah goes to ensure the safety of her sister is admirable. And yet the threat of the workhouse was always there.

And then there was the present day story, which was equally uncomfortable. Annabelle was immediately unlikeable and her scenes made for incredibly uncomfortable reading. She was rude, truculent, sulky, sullen and incredibly uncompromising. She hated Ellen and made no bones about it. 

As with all the stories in this delightful quartet, Kate Hewitt entwines the lives of past and present characters. Ellen is the mother of Sophie, who is the best friend of Merrie from the first book "The Wife's Promise", and Jane (also from the first book) is Ellen's close friend. Interestingly, the teenagers in these stories have grown with the subsequent additions of further tales, with Natalie, who was 14 in the first book then 15 when Rebecca appeared in the second "The Daughter's Garden", is now 17 and the same agae as Annabelle. I love how Hewitt connects all these characters in the subsequent tales, as each of their lives entwine within the sleepy coastal village of Goswell.

The title THE BRIDE'S SISTER conjures up images of happiness and contentment though this story is anything but. It is far more poignant than the first two but just as heart wrenching. Although we know of Sarah's ultimate fate from the beginning, the journey we are taken on is one filled with tragedy and heartache as we prepare ourselves for the tugging of our emotional heartstrings.

I love dual timelines and this tale is no different as each chapter alternates between the past and the present with the two seamlessly entwined through the discovery of a 150 year old death certificate. I had only ever read one Kate Hewitt book before (an historical fiction one as I'm not generally a contemporary fiction fan unless it's coupled with a historical timeline like this) and this series is fast becoming one of my favourites. Although each tale is different and standalone, Hewitt cleverly entwines previous characters with new ones with each new story.

Overall, though not an easy read, THE BRIDE'S SISTER is perfect for fans of dual timelines.

I would like to thank #KateHewitt, #NetGalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #TheBridesSister in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Kate Hewitt is the author of many romance and women’s fiction novels. A former New Yorker and now an American ex-pat, she lives in a small town on the Welsh border with her husband, five children, and their overly affectionate Golden Retriever. Whatever the genre, she enjoys telling stories that tackle real issues and touch people’s lives.

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads

PUBLISHER:

Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Bookouture by following them on these social media accounts.


REVIEW: The Daughter's Promise by Kate Hewitt



The Daughter's Garden (The Goswell Quartet #2) by Kate Hewitt
Genre: Historical fiction, Contemporary fiction, Dual timeline, Post-WW1
Read: 13th November 2022
Published: 17th November 2022

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

“I had to free it,” Eleanor said, and stretched her hand out to the blue butterfly that seemed almost to hover in the air. “I had to let something find what happiness it could, since we cannot.”

England, 1918: As war ends, across the world, people are trying to heal and recover. But Eleanor still feels broken. The loss of her beloved brother, killed just days before the Armistice was signed, feels impossibly unjust. Spending her time in the neglected garden behind their house, she fears her heart will never recover.

Then her father hires a man to help restore the garden to its former glory. Gruff, handsome Yorkshireman Jack comes from a totally different world to Eleanor, but he understands the nature of her grief more than anyone else seems to. And as they spend time together, even though she knows her family will never accept someone of Jack’s class, Eleanor starts to wonder if – like the butterflies around them – there is any way for her to learn to soar again...

Now: Nearly one hundred years later, Marin is not prepared for finding herself the guardian of her fifteen-year-old half-sister Rebecca, after her father and his second wife are killed in a tragic accident. The sisters are practically strangers, and Rebecca’s grief makes her seem even more distant. Marin too is in need of a fresh start, so when Rebecca begs her to let them move to the picturesque village of Goswell on the Cumbrian coast, Marin impulsively agrees.

But it is only when they find a locked door to a secret garden, and a photograph of a girl with a butterfly landing on her hand, that the sisters start to realise they have a mystery to solve, one about war, about secrets, and about a love that could never be. A mystery that might just bring them together…

The Daughter’s Garden is a totally unputdownable novel about tragic secrets, the chance for forgiveness, and the healing that can come from a new start. Perfect for fans of Fiona Valpy, Rhys Bowen and Lucinda Riley.

This novel can be enjoyed as a standalone.

Previously published as The Lost Garden by Katharine Swartz.


MY THOUGHTS:

I am excited to be taking part in the #BooksOnTour #BlogTour for Kate Hewitt's delightful dual timeline tale THE DAUGHTER'S GARDEN.

“She wondered who would open this gate one day in the future. Another girl, another gardener? Would they fill it with flowers, even butterflies? She almost smiled to think of the garden being redeemed and loved again”.

West Cumberland, 1918: The Great War may be over but it has left many scars and many a family broken in its wake. It was meant to be over by Christmas in 1914 they said, but four long years later and nearly 900,000 lives lost, peace finally came to the world once again. But not for Eleanor Sanderson, the vicar's daughter and their family. Their son Walter, whom they were expecting home at any moment, became one of those casualties falling just days before the Armistice was signed. It hardly seemed fair.

But as soon as the telegram boy delivered the envelope with a look of sorrow on his face, Eleanor's mother had taken to her bed and she was left to break the news to her Grandmama in the adjoining Bower House, her father who was visiting parishioners and her sister Katherine who had spent the day in Carlisle sorting donations. Eleanor just wanted to fall in a crumpled heap but her grandmama said she needed to be strong for  her family...because she was the strongest of them all.

The loss of her brother left Eleanor feeling bereft and without purpose...that is, until she found a new purpose. To create a garden memorial in Walter's memory. And with the help of gardener Jack Taylor, Eleanor did just that, utilising the walled garden that had once served as a herb garden. And in the midst of it...a beautiful butterfly house.

But it seems, tragedy is never far away as the Spanish flu sweeps the world in the wake of the war, and Eleanor suddenly falls ill at a garden fete. Will she be strong enough to overcome the influenza and find peace again?

Goswell, present day: After her father and his wife are killed in a car accident, Marin returns from Boston to undertake the care of her 15 year old half sister Rebecca. As a break from their the mundaneness of their normal routine, the sisters take a trip north and find themselves in sleepy Goswell and falling in love with the unusual but charming Bower House. In a flash of impulsivity, they make a decision to uproot their lives in Hampshire and move to the sleepy little village.

It is chance for a fresh start for the both of them as they set to making Bower House their own. Leaving most of their modern furnishings in their Hampshire house which they have rented out, Marin and Rebecca set to purchasing old fashioned furnishings for their new home. They meet their neighbours in the Vicarage, the Hattons, who had moved from America 18 months before and Rebecca and their daughter Natalie soon become friends.

But it is the exploration of the gardens one day that saw the sisters come across a fastened gate with a rusted latch to a walled garden, that gave them new purpose. Rebecca was eager to discover what lay beyond the gate...a secret garden of sorts...while Marin was less enthused. And it wasn't until she saw the hurt on Rebecca's face at her dismissal of it just being a garden full of brambles, that Marin realised what this idea really meant to her sister.

And soon Marin finds herself delving into the lost garden beyond the walls and rusted latch, and with the help of landscape gardener Joss, finds new meaning and purpose whilst searching its history and the woman in a photo who had once sought meaning and purpose within the very same walls.

THE DAUGHTER'S GARDEN is the second in the Goswell Quartet series and is a pure delight to read. I think I enjoyed it more than the first one as I think the characters were more likeable too. I loved the fact that those who featured in the previous book are also mentioned in part in this one too, which goes some way to linking the stories despite them being separate from each other. Such as the neighbours in the Vicarage who were front and centre in the first book and the Sandersons who are the focus this time around were merely mentioned in the first also. I love how Hewitt ties them all together and I hope she continues to do so through the remaining two books.

A gentle story with a steady pace, THE DAUGHTER'S GARDEN is about grief and loss and the overcoming of it. In both timelines, the main characters - Eleanor as well as Marin and Rebecca - have lost someone and while they feel very differently about their losses, they both need to find a purpose to give their lives meaning once again. I love how both women's stories, a hundred years apart, intersect with one another despite not being in the slightest way related. What does bind them is the lost garden of Bower House.

I love dual timelines and Kate Hewitt blends the present with the past beautifully. Both stories play out beautifully with an unexpected ending. I thoroughly enjoyed my time in Goswell and I fear I will miss it once I have finished the final book.

Overall, a pure delight to read. Perfect for fans of dual timelines.

I would like to thank #KateHewitt, #NetGalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #TheDaughtersGarden in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Kate Hewitt is the author of many romance and women’s fiction novels. A former New Yorker and now an American ex-pat, she lives in a small town on the Welsh border with her husband, five children, and their overly affectionate Golden Retriever. Whatever the genre, she enjoys telling stories that tackle real issues and touch people’s lives.

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads

PUBLISHER:

Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Bookouture by following them on these social media accounts.


REVIEW: The Wife's Promise by Kate Hewitt



The Wife's Promise (The Goswell Quartet #1) by Kate Hewitt
Genre: Historical fiction, Contemporary fiction, Dual timeline, WW2
Read: 12th November 2022
Published: 17th November 2022

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Alice looked at the young girl standing alone on the platform, sensing the same vulnerability she’d once felt entering the village she now called home. Then, as the child gripped her hand, the pain and sorrow Alice had held in her heart for so long softened… And in that moment, she vowed she’d always protect her – whatever the cost…

England, 1939: When Alice marries twinkly-eyed, kind-hearted vicar David, it means leaving everything from her old life behind and moving into the draughty vicarage in the beautiful but remote village of Goswell, Cumbria. Though homesick, Alice is determined to make a new life there for herself and her husband.

But soon tragedy strikes, and she is devastated when war breaks out and David chooses to sign up to fight. But everything changes when Alice is asked to take in a child evacuee, and she makes a promise to protect this girl, no matter what it costs her…

Now: When Jane and her family move to the small coastal village of Goswell where her husband grew up, she’s afraid she might have made a huge mistake. Their new home – in what had once been the vicarage – feels a million miles from their previous fast-paced life in New York City, and Jane struggles with her empty days that seem lonely and purposeless.

But then she finds a small note, forgotten behind a shelf in the pantry. A note written in the Second World War. By a woman named Alice, whose incredible story has the power to change everything…

Two wives’ stories – told over 70 years apart – about courage, finding a home, and how the unexpected arrival of someone else’s story in your life can change your own. Perfect for fans of Fiona Valpy, Lucinda Riley and Barbara O’Neal.

This novel can be enjoyed as a standalone.

Previously published as The Vicar’s Wife by Katharine Swartz.


MY THOUGHTS:

I am excited to be taking part in the #BooksOnTour #BlogTour for Kate Hewitt's delightful dual timeline tale THE WIFE'S PROMISE.

It all started with a shopping list...

Cumbria, present day: Jane and Andrew uproot their family from the hustle and bustle of their busy lives in New York City to relocate to the dank, cold and miserable Goswell on the Cumbrian coast. For sixteen years Andrew has lived in New York where he met and married Jane and now it's time for him to come home. But for Jane, the move is not as smooth sailing as they thought it would be...at least, not for her. Their three children Natalie (14), Ben (11) and Merrie (7 or 8) find the transition difficult at first but soon make friends and settle into their new life.

They move into a spacious old Vicarage and Jane has every intention of painting each room and making it home but for some reason can't seem to find a connection between the woman she was in New York to the one she's expected to become here and now in sleepy Goswell. It is while she is cleaning out the pantry that she finds an old shopping list stuck beneath the cold slate shelf, for keeping things cool in the times before refrigerators, that Jane finds herself a new purpose and feels compelled to investigate who wrote this list and what became of them. 

In asking the current vicar in the neighbouring church about records of old vicars, does Jane come across the names of David and Alice James who lived in the vicarage from 1930 till 1943. And Jane feels sure she has found the writer of her list.

1931: Nineteen year old Alice has just met and married the man of her dreams, David James. After their small wedding at her home in Cambridge, the couple then make the long and slow journey by various trains to Goswell in Cumbria, where David is serving as vicar. As soon as she arrives, Alice realises she has not put much thought into what it means to become a vicar's wife and all that it entails. It seems the villagers have such expectations of what she must do and Alice hasn't the first idea of how to do any of it. Or if she even wants to. All she wants is to be married to David, have a family and grow old with him. But David's duties to his parish are many that they only seem to have a couple of hours together in the evenings before retiring for the night.

From the time to arrived in Goswell, it seems she has had to face many challenges. From adapting to being a vicar's wife to a tragedy from which she thought she may never recover to the onset of war and David enlisting as a chaplain. Life becomes very lonely for Alice in the ensuing years that she takes up gardening and soon has a thriving array of vegetables to keep them going through the harsh rationing.

By the time 1940 comes around, news arrives that the village is to take around fifty evacuees and Alice decides that she wants to take one of them on, much to the annoyance of her housekeeper and the nosey churchwardens (you don't know what you are getting with the likes of them from the cities). She ends up with a resentful surly 12 year old girl called Vera with a seemingly huge chip on her shoulder whose attitude borders on rude. Alice wants so much to give her a loving home but has no idea how to reach the sullen young girl. That is, until a stray German bomber empties the last of his load on the Vicarage's outbuildings and Alice finds a frightened Vera hiding under the table thinking she was going to die.

THE WIFE'S PROMISE is a beautiful heartbreaking tale of two women separated by seven decades who lived in the same house. It is compelling and engaging throughout as each story speaks of sacrifice, love and love. It did take me a while to get into the story but once I did I was fully invested in uncovering what happens next.

This is my second read by Kate Hewitt and I love this particular style in dual timeline, which is one of my favourite formats. I intend on diving right into the second book in this compelling quartet right away. I think though my favourite story was Alice's. I found Jane a little self-absorbed and Natalie a bratty teenager.

Overall, a pure delight to read. Perfect for fans of dual timelines.

I would like to thank #KateHewitt, #NetGalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #TheWifesPromise in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Kate Hewitt is the author of many romance and women’s fiction novels. A former New Yorker and now an American ex-pat, she lives in a small town on the Welsh border with her husband, five children, and their overly affectionate Golden Retriever. Whatever the genre, she enjoys telling stories that tackle real issues and touch people’s lives.

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:

Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Bookouture by following them on these social media accounts.


Monday, 14 November 2022

COMING SOON: The Goswell Quartet by Kate Hewitt




Step back in time with these four beautifully written tales in dual timeline format dating from the 19th century to the present day.

Republished by Bookouture, The Goswell Quartet will be available from 17th November 2022.