#BookReview The Storm We Made by Vanessa Chan @HodderBooks

About the Book

Japanese-occupied Malaya, 1945. Cecily Alcantara’s family is in terrible danger: her fifteen-year-old son, Abel, has disappeared, and her youngest daughter, Jasmin, hides in a basement to prevent being pressed into service at the comfort stations. Her eldest daughter, Jujube, who serves tea to drunk Japanese soldiers, becomes angrier by the day. 

Cecily knows two things: that this is all her fault; and that her family must never learn the truth. 

A decade prior, Cecily, desperate to be more than a housewife in British-colonized Malaya, is lured into a life of espionage by the charismatic General Fujiwara. Seduced by a dream of an “Asia for Asians,” she helps usher in a war, and with it, a new, and more brutal occupier. Now, her family is on the brink of destruction – and she will do anything to save them. 

Format: eARC (322 pages)    Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Publication date: 4th January 2024 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find The Storm We Made on Goodreads


My Review

I first became aware of this book when I heard the author read an excerpt from it at the Women’s Prize Live event earlier this year. I knew immediately it had to go on my wishlist and I was thrilled when the publishers approved my request on NetGalley.

The story moves back and forth in time between 1934, when Cecily first encounters the charming but manipulative General Fujiwara – at that time going under the name Bingley Chan – and the four years from 1941 when the Japanese army supplanted the British as occupiers of Malaya (what is now called Malaysia). Told variously from the perspectives of Cecily, her son Abel and her daughters Jujube and Jasmin, it immerses the reader in the turmoil inflicted on one family by external events.

Having believed she was working for a noble cause, Cecily comes to realise she has helped to set in motion a train of events that will wreak havoc on her family and be disastrous for her country. Far from bringing about the liberation of Malaya, it sees a paternalistic colonial occupier replaced by a far more brutal regime. It’s a chilling lesson in the unforeseen consequences of lies and secrets. ‘Yet perhaps the only inevitable truth was that all lies eventually rise up to meet their makers.’ This is indeed the case for Cecily and something she is forced to confront, not only in relation to her own family, but for others to whom she has become close.

The author just about manages to retain, if not our sympathy, then our understanding of Cecily’s actions. Her obsession with Fujiwara – a man who can assume different personas seemingly at will -makes her blind to the fact she is being manipulated. He seems to fulfil some unmet need in her, providing her with a sense of purpose even though her actions involve subterfuge and a betrayal of her husband, Gordon. Indeed she even worries that when the Japanese are in control of Malaya, life will become ‘ordinary’ again, ‘filled with the small fanfares of family: children to be tamed, a husband to be tended to, the tragedies of dull domesticity rearing their ugliness once more’.

I thought Jujube was an interesting character. She’s old enough to understand more of what’s going on and the dangers her family face. Although Mr Takahashi, the teacher who frequents the teashop where she works, represents a more positive example of the Japanese race, Jujube eventually comes to resent his happiness. How can she celebrate his good fortune when she is faced with losing everything?

Meanwhile in Jasmin, the author gives us the innocent outlook of a child, confused at why she needs to remain hidden in the basement when everyone knows she’s afraid of the dark, wondering why she’s always hungry and why she cannot have a friend to play with. It leads her to take a daring action that could bring disaster.

The author pulls no punches in describing the savage treatment of the people of Malaya by the Japanese army following their occupation of the country in December 1941: forced labour, mass executions and sexual slavery. Many scenes are distressing to read, especially those involving Abel following his disappearance and the experiences of Yuki, the young girl whom Cecily’s daughter, Jasmin, befriends.

In her foreword, the author writes, ‘I hope that you will feel love, wonder, sorrow, and joy as you read. And mostly, I hope you will remember their stories’. The Storm We Made, although not an easy read at times, is an impressive debut. If you enjoy historical fiction that reveals a lesser known aspect of the events of WW2, it’s one to add to your wishlist or pre-order now.

I received an advance reader copy courtesy of Hodder & Stoughton via NetGalley.

In three words: Moving, powerful, immersive

Try something similar: The Gift of Rain by Tan Twan Eng


About the Author

Photo credit: Mary Inhea Kang

Vanessa Chan is the Malaysian author of The Storm We Made. Her short stories have been published in Electric Lit, Kenyon Review, Ecotone and more.

She loves to read (of course), but also really loves TV, spicy food, and brightly colored clothes.

Connect with Vanessa
Website | Twitter/X | Instagram

#BookSpotlight #Extract Darcy: A Pride and Prejudice Variation by Alice McVeigh @astmcveigh1

Calling all fans of Jane Austen – in particular Pride and Prejudice – or Regency romance!

Today on What Cathy Read Next I’m featuring Darcy by Alice McVeigh, the third book in her Jane Austen ‘variations’. A ‘witty and imaginative’ re-telling of Austen’s classic tale’ with a new ‘Darcyesque’ slant and containing omitted scenes from the original – as well as an extra helping of humour – Alice describes her book as ‘a fresh new Pride and Prejudice with (wedding) bells on!’ (I must admit, I am rather swooning over the image on the cover.)

Darcy: A Pride and Prejudice Variation is available to purchase from Amazon UK in paperback and as an ebook. And while you’re there, why not pick up the previous books in the series, Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel and Harriet: A Jane Austen Variation.

As every author knows, promoting your book to potential readers is a task that never ends. That’s where book bloggers come in so I’m pleased to be able to bring you an extract from the book that will, I hope, whet your appetite to click on that ‘Buy Now’ button.


About the Book

“Should she reject me again, I shall have to wed – as I swore I never would – for dynasty alone. I can only ever love Elizabeth Bennet.”

Love is put to the test in this fresh spin on Jane Austen’s starriest novel, entwining original and classic characters in a tale of passion and self-discovery. In a timeless story of love amid the clash of social classes, Darcy is faced with a terrible choice: to stay in London to force Wickham’s hand – or to go to Rome, to salvage his family’s reputation.

Find Darcy: A Pride and Prejudice Variation on Goodreads


Extract from Darcy: A Pride and Prejudice Variation by Alice McVeigh

As our visitors left, I chose to accompany the Gardiners and their niece to their carriage, taking the chance to thank Elizabeth. ‘It was very good of you to come.’

‘Not at all. Your sister is charming,’ said she. ‘How I long to hear her play!’

‘Thank you, but I hope to hear you play again, as well.’

‘I fear that would be only an embarrassment, as I have not touched an instrument this long age.’

‘But the voice can surely not have altered? Colonel Fitzwilliam said, only the other day, how it had brightened Rosings last Easter.’

She turned to look at me, as if contemplating some swift rejoinder, misjudged the depth of the marble step beneath, and slipped, with a little cry. Taking three steps in one, I caught her round the waist, secured her against the balustrade and released her. So strange a moment – locked close, a third of the way down the marble staircase – time itself suspended!

Her aunt, following, heard the cry and rushed to the head of the stairs. ‘Lizzy! What has happened?’

‘Why nothing at all! I fell, I cannot think how, but Mr Darcy caught me – for which I am most grateful,’ she said to me, with a private smile. ‘I am sorry to have alarmed you, Aunt, for I am rarely clumsy, as a rule.’

How I wished I could have prolonged that instant on the stair! I was then obliged to return to the saloon, where Miss Bingley was saying very spitefully, ‘How very ill Eliza Bennet looked this morning! I never in my life saw anyone so altered. She is grown so brown and coarse!’

I could not sleep that night, for recollecting that moment on the stair.


About the Author

Alice McVeigh was born in South Korea, of American diplomatic parents, and lived in Asia until she was 13, when the family returned to Washington D.C. She then fell in love with the cello, winning the Beethoven Society of Washington cello competition, and reaching the finals of the National Music Teachers Association Young Soloists national competition. After achieving a B.Mus. with distinction at the internationally acclaimed Jacobs School of Music, she came to London to study with Jacqueline du Pré and William Pleeth. Since then she has performed with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, the Royal Philharmonic and the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique all over Europe, America and Asia.

Her first two contemporary novels – While the Music Lasts and Ghost Music – were published by Orion Publishing/Hachette in the late 90s, and her first play (Beating Time) put on at the Lewisham Theatre. As well as performing, Alice has ghosted or edited over 200 books. She has also scribbled a witty guide to the orchestral profession: All Risks Musical, cartoons by Noel Ford. Her speculative thriller, Last Star Standing, was published by Unbound Publishing under her pen name, Spaulding Taylor, on February 21st, 2021. It won a Kirkus-starred review and was runner-up in the Independent Press Awards in the Action/Adventure category. It is a finalist in CIBA’s Cygnus Scifi Award, the Wishing Shelf Book Awards (in adult fiction) and the Eric Hoffer Book Awards (in science fiction).

In June 2021, Warleigh Hall Press published the first in her series of six Jane Austenesque novels (Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel). An imagining of Lady Susan as a sixteen-year-old, Susan was a quarter-finalist in Publishers Weekly’s 2021 BookLife Prize, won First Place (historical) in the Pencraft Book Awards, won a Gold Medal (historical) in the Global Book Awards and the eLit Book Awards 2022, was honoured with an IndieBRAG medallion and was selected as one of Shelf Unbound magazine’s “100 notable Indies” of 2021. The second (Harriet: A Jane Austen Variation) was a bestseller in Amazon’s British Historical Fiction category and recently selected as Editor’s Pick (“outstanding”) on Publishers Weekly. 

Alice is married to Professor Simon McVeigh, and lives in London. They have one daughter, who is doing a Master’s in Chinese Literature at Peking University (Beijing), and a second home in Crete. Apart from fiction, Alice’s greatest enthusiasms involve playing chamber music, tennis and the family’s long-haired mini-dachshunds. 

Connect with Alice
Website | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | Goodreads | BookBub