Book Review – Finding Dorothy by Elizabeth Letts

About the Book

Book cover of Finding Dorothy by Elizabeth Letts

Hollywood, 1938: As soon as she learns that MGM is adapting her late husband’s masterpiece, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, for the screen, Maud Gage Baum sets about trying to visit the set. Nineteen years after Frank’s passing, Maud is the only person who can help the producers stay true to the spirit of the book – because she’s the only one left who knows its secrets.

In the young star, Judy, Maud recognizes the yearning that defined her own story, from her rebellious youth as a suffragette’s daughter to her coming of age as one of the first women in the Ivy League, to the hardscrabble prairie years with Frank that inspired his famous work. With the actress under pressure, Maud resolves to protect her – the way she tried to protect the real Dorothy. . .

Format: Paperback (368 pages) Publisher: Quercus
Publication date: 9th January 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Finding Dorothy didn’t unfold in quite the way I expected based on the blurb. True, we get an insight into Maud Baum’s efforts to ensure the film adaptation of her husband’s famous work stays true to the spirit of the book. It’s an effort that involves determination and, on occasions, some sleight of hand. We also see her efforts to protect the young Judy Garland, thrust into the limelight by her ambitious mother. As Maud observes, ‘What must the weight of so much expectation – of men, and their ambitions and desires – feel like on the shoulders of a lonely teenage girl.’ Those who know about Judy Garland’s troubled life will see only too well its origins in her early experiences.

What I wasn’t expecting from the book was for so much of it to be about Maud’s life. I’m not complaining though because I found this absolutely fascinating and very moving in places, especially her relationship with her husband, Frank. They go through some tough times together and it’s often Maud who has to pick up the pieces when Frank’s flights of fancy fail to take off. But it’s the ‘flights of fancy’, unconventional outlook on life and sense of adventure that make Frank the person he is. ‘The hard times were not what she remembered about their life together. It was the moments, incandescent, transcendent […] when she could catch a glimpse of a world beyond. This vision, this second sight, was what Frank Baum had given to Maud.’ And of course, in the end, that’s what Frank gave to the world in the form of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.

I loved how the author included little details that eventually find a place in the The Wonderful Wizard of Oz – a scarecrow, a blue gingham dress, the name Dorothy. And there is a very moving moment when Maud realises the story Frank is telling their sons about a tin man without a heart is essentially his own story, a man forced to take mundane jobs to pay the bills which don’t give him any fulfilment. We also learn just why Maud is so determined to ‘save’ Judy.

Finding Dorothy is a wonderful blend of fact and fiction, and I can now understand why so many readers have fallen in love with it.

I received a review copy courtesy of Quercus. Finding Dorothy is book 8 of my 20 Books of Summer 2024.

In three words: Emotional, engaging, uplifting


About the Author

Author Elizabeth Letts

Elizabeth Letts is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Eighty-Dollar Champion and The Perfect Horse, which won the 2017 PEN Center USA Award Literary Award for research nonfiction, as well as two previous novels, Quality of Care and Family Planning. A former certified nurse-midwife, she also served in the Peace Corps in Morocco. She lives in Southern California and Northern Michigan. (Photo: Goodreads author page)

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Book Review – Berlin Duet by S. W. Perry @CorvusBooks

About the Book

Book cover of Berlin Duet by S. W. Perry

In 1938, English spy Harry Taverner and Jewish photographer Anna Cantrell spend the night dancing at Berlin’s most elegant hotel. Anna is married to another man, the Nazi shadow is rising over Europe and neither expects to ever meet again.

But once peace is declared, they reunite in the ruins of Berlin, where Anna is searching for her missing children. With the blockade tightening and the Soviets set on conquest, Harry and Anna walk a treacherous line between love and duty, integrity and survival, loyalty and betrayal. And as the Cold War dawns, they are bound together by a secret that will only be revealed decades later, when Berlin finds itself on the cusp of another transformation…

Format: Hardcover (448 pages) Publisher: Corvus
Publication date: 1st August 2024 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

S. W. Perry is the author of one of my favourite historical mystery series, the Jackdaw Mysteries, set in Elizabethan England. Now, in Berlin Duet, he has switched time and place to World War Two Europe with a story that left me equally enthralled.

For me, the book is not so much a duet as a concerto with Anna the soloist and Harry providing the essential accompaniment or taking over when she hesitates or doubts. Anna is a character who really leaps off the page. I loved her resilience and feistiness but also felt for her as she grapples with the challenges events throw at her. Harry is the epitome of a good man trying to do the right thing who comes to Anna’s rescue on more than one occasion.

The opening scene of the book in which Harry is surrounded by ghosts of the past is intensely moving. Realising that his memory is fading, he is determined to tell his daughter the story of Anna’s life and the events they witnessed together. Prompted by photographs taken by Anna, he describes how she was exposed to the magic of film through her father Rex who worked as a cameraman in Hollywood. It was he who gave her her first camera, a treasured Leica.

When her parents split up, Anna moves to Vienna with her wayward mother, Marion. Thanks to her mother she has an American passport but, less fortunately, Jewish blood. As the malign influence of Nazism spreads beyond Germany, Anna finds herself in a vulnerable position, married to a man, Ivo Wolff, who has become increasingly in thrall to Nazi ideology. Anna’s burgeoning career as a photojournalist brings her close to influential figures in the Nazi regime. However she struggles with the fact that in trying to capture truthfully the realities of war she is documenting the suffering of others, and possibly risking her photographs being used as Nazi propaganda. She finds comfort in the fact that her privileged access enables her to provide valuable intelligence to Britain. And of course there is the reassuring presence of the steadfast Harry.

But it turns out that privileged access doesn’t protect Anna from losing what is most precious to her, her two children by Ivo. And, even once the war is over, how do you find two people in a Europe that is in ruins and where hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced or disappeared?

It’s only in the final chapters that the whole picture is revealed and we learn just why it is so important to Harry to pass on the story to his daughter.

Berlin Duet is a dramatic story of wartime espionage with a moving love story at its heart.

I received a review copy courtesy of Corvus via NetGalley.

In three words: Powerful, tender, immersive
Try something similar: City of Spies by Mara Timon


About the Author

Author S. W. Perry

S. W. Perry was a journalist and broadcaster before retraining as an airline pilot. He lives in Worcestershire with his wife.

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