#BlogTour #BookReview The Stationmaster’s Daughter by Kathleen McGurl @HQDigitalUK

The Stationmasters DaughterWelcome to one of today’s three stops on the blog tour for The Stationmaster’s Daughter by Kathleen McGurl, published by HQ Digital on 7th August 2019. It will be available in paperback on 17th October 2019 and is available for pre-order now.

My thanks to Rachel at Rachel’s Random Resources for the invitation to join the tour and to HQ Digital for my review copy provided via NetGalley.


The Stationmaster's DaughterAbout the Book

As the last train leaves, will life ever be the same?

Dorset 1935 – Stationmaster Ted has never cared much for romance. Occupied with ensuring England’s most beautiful railway runs on time, love has always felt like a comparatively trivial matter. Yet when he meets Annie Galbraith on the 8.42 train to Lynford, he can’t help but instantly fall for her. But soon the railway is forced to close and a terrible accident occurs within the station grounds, Ted finds his job and any hope of a relationship with Annie hanging in the balance…

Present day – Recovering from heartbreak after a disastrous marriage, Tilly decides to escape from the bustling capital and move to Dorset to stay with her dad, Ken. When Ken convinces Tilly to help with the restoration of the old railway, she discovers a diary hidden in the old ticket office. Tilly is soon swept up in Ted’s story, and the fateful accident that changed his life forever. But an encounter with an enigmatic stranger takes Tilly by surprise, and she can’t help but feel a connection with Ted’s story in the past.

Format: ebook (384 pp.)                     Publisher: HQ Digital
Publication date: 7th August 2019. Genre: Historical Fiction, Dual Time

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com | Hive
*link provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Stationmaster’s Daughter on Goodreads


My Review

Despite being separated by over eighty years in time, Ted and Tilly are dealing with similar challenges.

Tilly is recovering from traumatic events in her personal life and the unexpected breakdown of her marriage to Ian. Both have brought her to the brink of despair. Thankfully her dear friend, Jo, and her lovely dad, Ken, are there to support her. Moving down to Dorset to stay with her father, Tilly initially rejects his wise advice and his attempts to encourage her to focus on the future. She turns to drink to soothe the anguish she feels until a chance encounter changes everything. Soon, Tilly finds her interest piqued by what she finds while working on the archives of the railway preservation society to which her father belongs.

Ted is a simple soul who has always found relationships with other people difficult and never imagined himself having a wife or family. That is until he meets Annie and a different life suddenly becomes a possibility. However, the announcement of the closure of the railway throws Ted’s life into turmoil. How will he cope with a change that threatens his job, home, routine and – most importantly – his relationship with Annie? The author really immerses the reader in Ted’s dilemma so you experience along with him each doubt and fear of this sweet, gentle man. Luckily, Ted has his sister Norah to provide a little reassurance and wise advice, although even she is unable to prevent the tragic events that will follow.

At the end of the book, the two storylines come together in a completely satisfying way. And when the full story of the dramatic event described in the prologue is finally revealed, there is sadness but also a new understanding and appreciation of the choices made by those involved.

The skilful writing and heartfelt, poignant story really drew me into the book. The Stationmaster’s Daughter will warm the cockles of your heart and quite possibly cause you to shed a tear or two.

In three words: Touching, tender, emotional

Try something similar: The Forgotten Secret by Kathleen McGurl

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The Stationmasters Kathleen McGurl author photoAbout the Author

Kathleen McGurl lives near the sea in Bournemouth, UK, with her husband and elderly tabby cat. She has two sons who are now grown-up and have left home. She began her writing career creating short stories, and sold dozens to women’s magazines in the UK and Australia. Then she got side-tracked onto family history research – which led eventually to writing novels with genealogy themes. She has always been fascinated by the past, and the ways in which the past can influence the present, and enjoys exploring these links in her novels.

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Blog Tour/Book Review: The Things We Cannot Say by Kelly Rimmer

kr_blog_tour

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for The Things We Cannot Say by Kelly Rimmer.  Thanks to Anne Cater at Random Things Tours for my invitation to join the tour.

Do check out the posts by the other great book bloggers taking part in the tour who have been giving the book rave reviews. For example:

Berit at Audio Killed The Bookmark called it ‘a beautifully crafted story’
Kaisha at The Writing Garnet described it as a ‘beautiful, beautiful book’
Emma at Shaz’s Book Blog confessed the book left her ‘an emotional wreck’


The Things We Cannot SayAbout the Book

Inspired by the author’s family history, a searing page-turner of war, family secrets and a love to defy all odds, from the Top Ten Australian bestselling author of Before I Let You Go.

2019 – Life changed beyond recognition for Alice when her son, Eddie, was born with autism spectrum disorder. She must do everything to support him, but at what cost to her family? When her cherished grandmother is hospitalised, a hidden box of mementoes reveals a tattered photo of a young man, a tiny leather shoe and a letter. Her grandmother begs Alice to return to Poland to see what became of those she held dearest.

WWII – Alina and Tomasz are childhood sweethearts. The night before he leaves for college, Tomasz proposes marriage. But when their village falls to the Nazis, Alina doesn’t know if Tomasz is alive or dead.

2019 – In Poland, separated from her family, Alice begins to uncover the story her grandmother is so desperate to tell, and discovers a love that bloomed in the winter of 1942. As a painful family history comes to light, will the struggles of the past and present finally reach a heartbreaking resolution?

Format: ebook (352 pp.)    Publisher: Headline Review
Published: 7th March 2019 Genre: Contemporary/Historical Fiction, Romance

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Things We Cannot Say on Goodreads


My Review

The book alternates between the stories of two women– Alina and Alice – and two timelines – the present day and Second World War Poland.

For me, the storyline told from the point of view of Alina was the more compelling and powerful.  Her experiences and those of her family and community as Poland comes under the thrall of the Nazis are dramatically described.  The day-to-day realities of food shortages, persecution (and worse) of Jews, the constant fear of reprisals and the agonies of not knowing what has happened to loved ones were brilliantly conveyed. I can’t be the only reader who experienced a chill down their spine when the relevance of the location of Alina’s family’s farm became clear.  Alina’s story is also a deeply moving love story.

In the modern day story, I admired Alice’s devotion to her son, Eddie and her desire to fulfil the wishes of her seriously ill maternal grandmother, but found Alice’s certainty that her way of caring for her son was the only way less easy to empathise with.  At times, the two stories felt separate apart from the connection of Alice’s search for the answers to her grandmother’s questions about her family’s past.  This quest takes Alice to Poland in an attempt to uncover the truth but also becomes a voyage of self-discovery for Alice that started to endear me to her as she becomes more willing to trust others.

However, the more I thought about the book, the more I was drawn to the idea of communication – or the inability, unwillingness or failure to communicate – as a shared theme of the two stories.  There’s the obvious connection that Alice’s grandmother  has been robbed of the power of speech by a stroke and that Alice’s son, Eddie, has communication difficulties as a result of his autism spectrum disorder.  As it turns out they are both able to utilise the same specialist application to overcome this.

I was also struck by other ways in which the title of the book is reflected in the story.  There are things that cannot be spoken of because they are too terrible to describe.  For example, Emilia, Tomasz’s sister, who has witnessed horrifying things but finds no outlet to express her thoughts about them because her family forbid it, finds release in her long talks with Alina.  There are things for which no words are needed because gestures or actions suffice.  And there are unspoken thoughts which should really not be expressed aloud.  For example, when during an angry exchange in a fractious call between Alice and husband, Wade, she admits ‘It’s the vodka talking.  It’s the disappointment speaking’. Then there’s Eddie, who occasionally demonstrates unexpected  perception about other’s feelings and reflects back to others phrases he associates with them.

However, looking at it from the opposite point of view, the book suggests there are things that must be said – if you like the things we cannot not say.  At one point in the torturous process of trying to make sense of her family’s wartime history Alice, trying to persuade herself to carry on, wonders, ‘What happens when stories like theirs are lost?  What happens when there’s no-one left to pass your experience on to, or you just can’t bring yourself to share it?’.

The Things We Cannot Say is a powerful, moving story about love, family, sacrifice and the triumph of the human spirit over adversity.  I received an advance review copy courtesy of publishers, Headline Review, and Anne Cater at Random Things Tours.

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In three words: Emotional, powerful, thought-provoking

Try something similar…The Good Doctor of Warsaw by Elisabeth Gifford (read my review here)


Kelly Rimmer Author PictureAbout the Author

Kelly Rimmer is the USA Today bestselling author of contemporary fiction novels including Me Without You, The Secret Daughter, When I Lost You, A Mother’s Confession and her most recent release, Before I Let You Go. She lives in rural Australia with her husband and children.

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