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Home for Christmas: a gripping Christmas wartime saga

Original price was: £17.95.Current price is: £2.99.

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A stunning tale of four young women thrown together by war.

Finding freedom and independence – as well as love, passion and heartbreak – for the very first time, a unique bond is formed as the hostilities take their toll on Britain.

It’s September 1940 and the German blitz on London has just begun. The four young girls who live at No. 13 Article Row live under its constant threat. But life must go on…

Tilly and Sally both work at Barts Hospital where they witness the cruelty of war first-hand.

Agnes volunteers to work extra hours at her underground station to help with the nightly influx of people seeking safety from the bombs.

Dulcie, with her broken ankle, tries to make peace with her mother, following the news of the death of her sister Enid. But her grief-stricken mother doesn’t want to know.

Sally returns to her painful past in Liverpool. But it’s not seeing the man she once loved, nor her father and ex-best friend’s child that hurt most…

As Christmas approaches, the arrival of the handsome young American Drew, ignites new life in the heart Tilly thought was broken.

As the bombs continue to rain down on a frosty London, perilous challenges lay around every corner. And all anyone wants this year is to be home for Christmas.

ASIN ‏ : ‎ B005IH023K
Publisher ‏ : ‎ HarperCollins
Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
Publication date ‏ : ‎ 27 Oct. 2011
Edition ‏ : ‎ UK ed.
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 1.7 MB
Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Print length ‏ : ‎ 323 pages
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0007419395
Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Book 2 of 5 ‏ : ‎ Article Row
Best Sellers Rank: 61,943 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store) 133 in Medical Fiction (Books) 139 in Medical Fiction (Kindle Store) 775 in Historical World War II Fiction eBooks
Customer reviews: 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 929 ratings var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });

Customers say

Customers find this book easy to read and appreciate its engaging storyline about four girls, with believable characters and well-written prose. Moreover, the book provides insight into the war years, and customers describe it as heart-warming, with one noting it brings tears to their eyes. Additionally, they love the author’s work.

13 reviews for Home for Christmas: a gripping Christmas wartime saga

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  1. Karen

    Good read
    I love reading her books thanks

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  2. Tosie

    Sweet!
    I came across London Belles in a charity shop, and enjoyed it so much that I read it in two days. I immediately bought this sequel to read on my Kindle. It is a sweet story about four very different girls and their experiences during WW2.The characters are well defined and the story flows well.I read this one in about four hours,and I have already downloaded the next book in the series. I hope there will be more.If you like a good easy reading story, you will enjoy this series.

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  3. KarenzaG

    War romance a nice easy read
    Took a little longer to get into this one than it did with the prequel and while it was interesting and entertaining, I felt it could have been better edited as poor punctuation and grammar leaves one feeling that this book was perhaps rushed out hot on the heels of the one before.

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  4. Kindle Customer

    Good Read
    I really enjoyed this book. Very easy to read. It is the second in the series. The first one was really good too and after reading it I was eager to know what had happened to the girls and this second book has lived up to my expectations. Highly recommend this book for a good light read which brings to life vividly the experiences of living through the 2nd world war in London.

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  5. juggers13

    To make sure you read the series in the right order for the story line to follow in sequence
    Haven’t read it yet but really enjoyed the first in the series. Characters seem so real and great story lines. I ordered the second hand copy and it was like new as all the others I’ve ordered were too. Looking forward to reading them all.

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  6. Leigh

    A good addition to the series
    I enjoyed visiting with the women at 13 Article Row again. This time Christmas is on it’s way. Sally plans a trip home to visit her mother and comes face to face with her father who she feels betrayed by and rushing home only to be involved in a bombing raid on the way back to London. Dulcie continues to be both a selfish pain and also a sympathetic character all at once, I’m sure if my mother treated me the way hers did I’d probably act out in the same way. There is romance in store for Tilly, much to her mother’s chagrin as she watches her daughter start to grow up and more apart from her, and Agnes continues to try and win over Ted’s family with not much success. Overall it was an enjoyable addition to the Article Row series and I look forward to the next installment.

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  7. HANKA

    Three Stars
    an easy read but also easy to forget.

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  8. Hazel

    a good book
    A very easy book to read. It flowed on easily. Not terribly dramatic but an easy book to go to bed with. Giving an insight to the war years.

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  9. Kindle Customer

    easy read

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  10. Kodieman-9451

    I really enjoy the Annie Groves writes. Just enough history to put you there without boring you with mundane details that don’t add anything to the story.

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  11. Helen Crowe

    As a follow up of London Belles it was wonderful. The characters were so very real and so much of the era that I felt I was right there with them every step of the way. Her writing is exceptional.

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  12. Ruth Anderson

    Annie Groves’s saga following four women on the London homefront during the early days of World War II continues in Home for Christmas. Picking up just a few short weeks after the conclusion of London Belles, which saw Olive, her daughter Tilly, and their lodgers Sally, Agnes, and Dulcie survive the first wave of Hitler’s blitz on London, these five very different women find themselves newly bonded in a sisterhood forged by the hardships of war. Sally continues to bury herself in her work as a nurse at St. Bart’s — immersed in the horrific impact of the Blitz first-hand, she remains haunted by her mother’s death and father’s hasty remarriage. Agnes is thrilled to be “as good as” engaged to her boyfriend Ted — the only blight on her joy the shadow of her past as an orphan and the obvious disdain in which Ted’s mother views her son’s relationship. The vivacious Dulcie finds security in her new-found friendship with her fellow Article Row residents, but struggles with her mother’s rejection and chafes against wartime restrictions. Tilly, determined to forget Dulcie’s handsome brother, blossoms in her work for the ambulance service, and catches the eye of a handsome American reporter newly-arrived to bring stories of the Blitz home to audiences across the sea. And Olive worries for all of “her girls,” but particularly Tilly, as she fears the desire to seize a scrap of happiness in these uncertain times will lead one or more of the girls to irrevocable heartache, little realizing that it is perhaps her own heart in need of guarding most of all.Whereas London Belles, the first installment in Groves’s Article Row series, was tasked with introducing five heroines from wildly varied walks of life, in its sequel roles and personalities are established, allowing Groves to shift her focus to the impact of the war on the homefront society as a whole as seen through the experiences of her heroines. While I enjoyed the nostalgic, sentimental feel of London Belles, that novel as an introduction to Groves’s writing is not without its problems — among them the aforementioned sentimentality and the arguably often glacially-paced plotting — I genuinely felt invested in the characters’ lives and experiences. I love the fact that Groves opts to explore in great depth the lives of women on the homefront, and how the war not only gave them increasingly wide opportunities in the professional realm but she invests great time and detail and explicating the war’s emotional and practical effects.Happily Groves’s second outing to Article Row goes a long way toward ameliorating — if not eliminating — many of the issues that plagued the first book in the series. With London deep in the throes of the Blitz, Groves’s character development is given the chance to shine, as — having established the players — she is now free to delve more deeply into the impact the war and its attendant fears and privations have on their lives. One of my favorite storylines is Tilly’s sweetly developing romance with Drew, the American reporter. He is SUCH a gentleman and I loved how he gently persisted, determined to win her friendship first, and then her heart. Groves continues to develop Agnes’s romance with Ted, and my heart just broke when she first met Ted’s battleaxe of a mother, and celebrated when she finally received her longed-for ring. And though it may be the stuff of pure soap opera, I’m anxious to see how the ever-proper Olive’s feelings for her very married policeman neighbor develop, as even in wartime such a whisper of scandal could ruin a single — albeit a widowed — woman’s reputation.Groves touches on the issue of changing moral views in almost every woman’s life, but the focus on such comes in to sharp relief as concerns Sally and her struggles to reconcile her past with the possibility of a future with her doctor boyfriend George. As the war and the Blitz progresses, and casualties on the homefront and abroad mount, society — particularly young women — were faced with a choice: cling to a pre-war moral mentality, or bend and embrace a more carpe diem approach to the increasing uncertainties of life. Sally in particular is susceptible to this effect of war, as she is plagued by lost romantic opportunities in her past and faced with death on a daily basis in her role as a nurse (brought into stark relief in the aftermath of a harrowing train derailment). But bending moral views as regards intimacy between men and women is not without consequence, and here Groves hints at drastic changes — and consequences — to come, as women both young and old, as embodied by the likes of Sally and Olive, struggle to reconcile societal expectations with the pressing desires of the heart.Home for Christmas is a wonderful, nostalgic glimpse into a world at war, improving in nearly every respect on its predecessor. While not without its faults (the flashback to Sally’s earlier heartbreak feels shoe-horned in and overly long), its occasional “clunkiness” is forgivable in light of its improved pacing, plotting, and character development. Groves is at her best when exploring the emotional, human toll of the war, and while her characters are simply drawn they are heartfelt and genuine. I like these women, I want them to triumph, but above that my vintage-loving heart appreciates Groves’s writing as more than just a love letter to the time, but a tribute to the ordinary men and women who, in the face of the unimaginable horror of the Blitz, found in themselves the ability to become extraordinary survivors.

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  13. kerry preece

    I really like the series concept. The information along with the story is interesting. The writing is easy to read.

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    Home for Christmas: a gripping Christmas wartime saga
    Home for Christmas: a gripping Christmas wartime saga

    Original price was: £17.95.Current price is: £2.99.

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