#BookReview The Artist and the Soldier by Angelle Petta


About the Book

Two young men come of age and fall in love against the backdrop of true events in World War II.

It’s 1938. Bastian Fisher and Max Amsel meet at a Nazi-American summer camp, Camp Siegfried. Neither boy has any idea what to do with their blooming, confusing feelings for one another. Before they can begin to understand, the pair is yanked back into reality and forced in opposite directions.

Five years later, during the heart of World War II, Bastian’s American army platoon has landed in Salerno, Italy. Max is in Nazi-occupied Rome where he has negotiated a plan to hire Jews as ‘extras’ in a movie – an elaborate ruse to escape the Nazis. Brought together by circumstance and war, Bastian and Max find one another again in Rome.

Format: ebook (348 pages)         Publisher: Warren Publishing
Publication date: 1st May 2018 Genre: Historical fiction, LGBT

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My Review

The Artist and the Soldier is described as “exploring the true stories of Camp Siegfried, a Nazi-American summer camp in New York, and the making of the film which saved hundreds of lives”. Personally, I wouldn’t have minded if more of the book had focused on how camps like Camp Siegfried came to be run in America as it seems quite extraordinary now that young people should have been exposed to pro-Nazi propaganda at this time. Having said that, in her afterword, the author talks more about the inspiration for the book and you can also find out more in my Q&A with Angelle conducted ahead of its publication in 2018. (Unfortunately this will also demonstrate – to my shame – just how long this book has been in my review pile.)

Understandably, the main focus of the book is the relationship between Max and Bastian, both of whom are forced to hide their true sexuality. The author does a good job of conveying the confusion and uncertainty caused by their growing feelings for each other, the shifting dynamics of their relationship and also the exhilaration of finding someone with whom you can be yourself. Max and Bastian also share troubled home lives and have experienced family tragedy. Before their relationship can develop further, however, a shocking and, to my mind, unforgivable action on the part of one of them drives them in different directions.

The son of an Italian mother, Max takes up his Uncle Franco’s suggestion that he travel to Italy, where he eventually enrols in film school. Meanwhile Bastian, in an act of rebellion against his violent and pro-Nazi father, enlists with the US Army. ‘What would anger his father more than anything in the world? If he joined the fight against the Nazis.’ He is posted abroad and it will be many years until Max and Bastian meet again.

I confess I wasn’t a huge fan of the frequent “head-hopping” between the thoughts of different characters (occasionally within a single paragraph). I found it rather distracting and sometimes had to re-read a section to work out whose thoughts were being revealed. I much preferred the chapters later in the book written mainly or entirely from a single point of view. As it happens, this coincided with the change of location to wartime Italy and this was much the most interesting part of the book for me.

Bastian’s sister, Ilsa, makes an appearance in the second half of the book and I found her a particularly engaging character. Whereas I found Bastian difficult to like – even his sister describes him as “the king of self-preservation” – I admired Isla’s conviction that she could help to make the world a better place. Enrolling as a nurse, her intervention proves crucial on a number of occasions and I wished for a happier outcome for her.

The Artist and the Soldier combines an intense love story with the depiction of real life events. In doing so it shines a light on the courage and resilience of those who tried to protect others from the horrors of war.

My thanks to Angelle for my digital copy of her book and waiting so patiently for my review.

In three words: Intense, intimate, absorbing

Try something similar: Mussolini’s Island by Sarah Day

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Angelle Petta authorAbout the Author

Angelle Petta began writing novels over 15 years ago and has written in several genres.

​She holds an MA from Emerson College, and a master’s equivalency in Drama Therapy through the NADTA.  Angelle is a registered drama therapist and a PhD student at Lesley University.  She works as a Drama Therapist at an Expressive Arts Center in Virginia called A Place To Be.

​She lives in Northern Virginia with her husband, two delightful dogs, and one fat cat.

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#BookReview Talland House by Maggie Humm @SheWritesPress

Talland House BT PosterWelcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for Talland House by Maggie Humm. My thanks to Anne Cater at Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour and to She Writes Press for my digital review copy.


About the Book

Royal Academy, London 1919: Lily has put her student days in St. Ives, Cornwall, behind her – a time when her substitute mother, Mrs. Ramsay, seemingly disliked Lily’s portrait of her and Louis Grier, her tutor, never seduced her as she hoped he would. In the years since, she’s been a suffragette, a nurse in WWI,and now she’s a successful artist with a painting displayed at the Royal Academy.

Then Louis appears at the exhibition with the news that Mrs. Ramsay has died under suspicious circumstances. Talking to Louis, Lily realizes two things: she must find out more about her beloved Mrs. Ramsay’s death (and her sometimes-violent husband, Mr. Ramsay); and she still loves Louis.

Set between 1900 and 1919 in picturesque Cornwall and war-blasted London, Talland House takes Lily Briscoe from the pages of Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse and tells her story outside the confines of Woolf’s novel – as a student in 1900, as a young woman becoming a professional artist, her loves and friendships, mourning her dead mother, and solving the mystery of her friend Mrs. Ramsay’s sudden death.

Talland House is both a story for our present time, exploring the tensions women experience between their public careers and private loves, and a story of a specific moment in our past – a time when women first began to be truly independent.

Format: (Paperback, 352 pages) Publisher: She Writes Press
Publication date: 3rd September 2020 Genre: Historical fiction

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My Review

I haven’t read Virginia Woolf’s To The Lighthouse, the novel in which the character Lily Briscoe appears, so I came to Talland House without any knowledge of the book which inspired it. I think this probably placed me at a disadvantage when it came to appreciating how and to what extent Maggie Humm has incorporated elements of Woolf’s original into Talland House, and how much of the characterization of the individuals who appear in the book is drawn from the author’s own imagination or builds on what is in To The Lighthouse.

This is particularly the case with Mr. Ramsey who, in Talland House, is depicted as having few redeeming qualities. Described variously as ‘hot-tempered’ and ‘self-centred’, the reader witnesses sudden outbursts which, if carried out by a child, would probably be described as temper tantrums. However, since he is a grown man, and a heavily built one at that, these fits of temper, with their undercurrents of violence, are considerably more alarming. His wife’s attempts to prevent these outbursts or distract others’ attention from them I found unsettling.

Having lost her own mother, it’s no surprise when Lily finds herself drawn to Mrs. Ramsey, the very epitome of a caring mother. Not only is Mrs. Ramsay beautiful but she displays a keen interest in art, music and literature. Finding her friendship returned, Lily delights in the “rich essence of female connection, a fervent intensity because they were were both women”.

Having visited St. Ives in Cornwall, I enjoyed the sections of the book set there and could easily imagine the picturesque streets, houses and sea views inspiring artists like Lily. I could also appreciate the challenge of trying to capture the essence of the natural world in paint. For Lily, painting is a vital form of self-expression allowing her a freedom to communicate thoughts and feelings she feels unable to articulate verbally, either because of the inadequacy of words or because of social conventions. “She wanted always to paint as she’d dimly known she could paint, not imitating others but becoming herself.” Her inability to complete her portrait of Mrs. Ramsey, therefore, is more than just an irritation, it is a reflection of Lily’s doubts about her own artistic ability and, in a way, her feeling of incompleteness as a person.

The events in Talland House play out at a measured pace switching back and forth in time, from Lily’s first arrival in St. Ives in 1900 to the final scenes in 1919. This provides plenty of opportunities for descriptions of landscapes which emphasise their colours and shapes, as if seen through the eyes of an artist. I especially liked how the author captured the gloomy, eerily silent atmosphere of First World War London, such as in this passage in which Lily glimpses the tower housing Big Ben. “It was silent, the unlit white-and-black clock difficult to see in the smog. Missing the striking of hours and quarters, she felt outside of time, and the streets, too, seemed to float free, as if a grey ocean had swept up the Thames enveloping them all.”

Although a smaller element of the story than the blurb might suggest, Lily’s efforts to discover the true circumstances surrounding Mrs Ramsey’s death add a sprinkling of mystery to the final chapters of the book. However, I mean it in the best possible way when I say that I didn’t think the book needed this extra, rather melodramatic element. Personally, I found Lily’s story, as she grows in self-confidence and forges an independent path in life, sufficiently engaging in its own right. On the other hand, for those who have read To The Lighthouse, the author’s solution may provide the vital missing piece to complete the equivalent of a literary jigsaw. Or perhaps I should say, the last brushstroke on the canvas.

Rich in detail, Talland House is an absorbing story that celebrates female friendship during a period of upheaval and social change.

In three words: Thoughtful, engaging, detailed

Try something similar: Charlotte by Helen Moffett

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About the Author

Maggie Humm is an Emeritus Professor at the University of East London in the UK. An international Woolf scholar, she is the author/editor of fourteen books, the last three of which focused on Woolf and the arts. Talland House was shortlisted for the Impress and Fresher Fiction prizes in 2017 (as Who Killed Mrs. Ramsay? ) and the Retreat West and Eyelands prizes in 2018. She lives in London and is currently writing Rodin’s Mistress, a novel about the tumultuous love affair of the artists Gwen John and Rodin.

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