#BookReview #BlogTour The Unheard by Anne Worthington @Confingo @RichardsonHelen #TheUnheard

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Unheard by Anne Worthington. My thanks to Helen at Helen Richardson PR for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Cōnfingō for my review copy.

The Unheard is a book that has been wowing readers. If you don’t believe me, check out this fabulous review by Linda at Linda’s Book Bag.


About the Book

Tom Pullan knows that the people who visit him are trying to tell him something, but he cannot remember what. He knows the faces in his memory, the ones he loved, are not the ones around him now.

We are drawn into a world where brutal events from the past lie just below the surface. Plunged inside the characters’ heads, we experience their thoughts and feelings: sorrow and rage they cannot share; the intense feelings and turbulent sexuality of a teenage girl; a boy who saw something that casts a long shadow over his life.

What do we do with a lifetime of unheard truths, questions and fears? The Unheard is a novel about memory, and what happens to the experiences that are too much for us but we are unable to leave behind.

Format: Paperback (160 pages) Publisher: Confingo Publishing
Publication date: 11th July 2023 Genre: Literary Fiction

Find The Unheard on Goodreads

Purchase links 
Publisher | Amazon UK 
Links provided for convenience only, not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

Tom has dementia and May, his wife of many years, is seriously ill. They’d always promised each other they’d stay together to the end but now this seems it might not be possible. Tom forgets a lot these days, like what time it is or whether he’s had his tea. But there have also been things in his life that he couldn’t forget even though he wanted to, like his experiences during the war. And, as a child, there were things he was told he must forget, terrible things that he didn’t fully understand at the time. If your heart hasn’t been broken a little bit by the end of the first part of the book then prepare for it to have been torn asunder by the end. (Please can someone invent a way to reach into a book and give the characters a hug.)

Moving back in time, alongside depicting events in Tom’s life, the book explores social and political issues such as economic injustice and digital exclusion, particularly during the section of the book set in 1984, a time of industrial unrest in the UK. Tom has a visceral reaction to the person he calls ‘that woman’ (Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher) and has no truck with the theory of ‘trickle down’ economics. As he says, ‘When have the rich allowed their money to spill over for the rest of us? And when has money ever flowed down to the poor?’. Quite, Tom.

The experiences of Maggie, his teenage daughter, are raw and disturbing but demonstrate that there are many ways to be, or feel, unheard.

Being inside Tom’s head is often unsettling and heartrending but at other times his resilience and determination to do the best for his family make it joyous.

The writing is wonderful. Even when the author is describing pain or despair, there’ll be a phrase that makes you stop and think, yes, that must be what it’s like – or even, I know that feeling. I especially loved the use of repetition, the phrases that occur in Tom’s head over and over again, like a refrain.

The Unheard is one of those books that it’s difficult to do justice to in a review and I don’t think I’ve come close to communicating how brilliant I thought it was. It’s a short book but it packs a real punch. And after this I don’t think I’ll ever think about the song ‘You are my sunshine, my only sunshine’ in quite the same way again.

In three words: Moving, powerful, lyrical

Try something similarOld God’s Time by Sebastian Barry


About the Author

Anne Worthington is a documentary photographer and writer. She was awarded an MA with Distinction for Creative Writing in 2018. Anne was a finalist for Iceland Writers Retreat 2015, and shortlisted for the Fish Flash Fiction Prize 2018. She lives in the north of England. The Unheard is her first novel.

Connect with Anne
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#BookReview #BlogTour The Soldier’s Child by Tetyana Denford @bookouture

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Soldier’s Child by Tetyana Denford. My thanks to Jess at Bookouture for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my digital review copy via NetGalley. Do check out the posts by my tour buddies for today, Robin at Robin Loves Reading, Emma at Shaz’s Book Blog and Julia at Christian Bookaholic.


About the Book

“He is mine, he is ours,” she whispers, as the tears in her eyes gather in the corners. She holds her baby tightly, her breath coming out in ragged gasps, knowing that she needs to give her child to her brother forever. But will she ever be able to tell her child the truth about who his real mother is?

Ukraine, 1941 . War has ripped Katya ’s country and heart in two. When two soldiers knock down her door and force her into a truck, she knows deep down that this might be the last time she ever sees home. As she is driven away to a labour camp, she looks out the tiny window at the barren winter landscape and thinks only of her son Alexander , who she was forced to leave behind and may never see again…

Decades later, Katya has tried to rebuild her life after the horrors of war, but she still clings on to the hope of being reunited with her precious son. But whilst Katya has stayed in Ukraine, little does she know that her son moved his family to America years before in search of a better life.

Can she find peace without knowing what happened to him? Will Katya ever be able to reunite with Alexander and tell the truth about who she is? Or will they be defeated by the war that has already taken so much from them?

Format: eARC (350 pages) Publisher: Bookouture
Publication date: 10th July 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find The Soldier’s Child on Goodreads

Purchase links 
Hive | Amazon UK 
Links provided for convenience only, not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

The Soldier’s Child is an incredibly emotional and dramatic story which although a work of fiction is based partly on events in the author’s own family. The story is narrated from two main points of view – Katya, and her son, Alexander (the soldier’s child of the title). However, at certain points we also witness events from the perspective of Sasha (the soldier of the title) and Alexander’s son, Evgen.

Although a lot of the events take place during WW2 and focus on the dreadful experiences of the people of Ukraine during that period, the action of the book spans six decades, from 1918 to the 1980s. The story moves back and forth in time and personally I would have found it helpful if all not just some of the chapter headings had shown a date. The inclusion of a family tree was incredibly useful for helping me keep track of characters and their relationships. The book does include some words in Ukrainian and Russian so be prepared to refer to your favourite search engine if they’re unfamiliar to you.

Most stories need a villain and in this case it’s a female character whose destructive actions result in Katya being parted from the man she loves and, later, from her son Alexander, in the process changing the course of Katya’s life.

The standout sections of the book for me were those describing Katya’s terrible experiences in Vorkuta, a Soviet labour camp where she is put to work in a gold mine alongside others who have fallen foul of Stalin’s regime. As well as gruelling work often with no tools but her hands, the extreme cold of Siberian winters and a near starvation diet, the possibility of death for a minor misdemeanour or on the whim of a guard is everpresent. The resilience needed to survive this is unimaginable.

The Soldier’s Child is a story of the cruelty of war, of displacement and forced separation from loved ones. And the sad thing is that Ukrainians are once again suffering at the hands of an invader who has no regard for human life. However, it’s also a story of courage, hope and resilience. And we see that again today in Ukraine.

In three words: Emotional, dramatic, moving

Try something similarThe Lace Weaver by Lauren Chater


About the Author

Tetyana Denford grew up in a small town in New York, and is a Ukrainian-American author, translator, and freelance writer. She grew up with her Ukrainian heritage at the forefront of her childhood, and it led to her being fascinated with how storytellers in various cultures passed down their lives to future generations; life stories are where we learn about ourselves, each other, and are the things that matter most, in a world where things move so quickly.

Connect with Tetyana
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