The care and management of lies A novel of the great war

Jacqueline Winspear, 1955-

Book - 2014

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FICTION/Winspear, Jacqueline
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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Published
New York, NY : Harper [2014]
Language
English
Main Author
Jacqueline Winspear, 1955- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
319 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062220516
9780062220509
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

In World War I, it took only two days for a letter from home to reach a British soldier fighting for his life in France - a sobering reminder of how the civilized and the barbaric collided in what contemporaries wishfully called "the war to end all wars." Winspear has made a specialty of this era in her best-selling Maisie Dobbs mystery series, centered on a former nurse turned sleuth. In this new novel, she examines the contrasting lives of two English school friends, Kezia Marchant and Thea Brissenden. Kezia marries Thea's younger brother, Tom, and leads a conventional life helping him run the family farm in Kent - until Tom enlists, leaving her to manage the place on her own. Thea, meanwhile, becomes a suffragist and peace activist in London before joining a volunteer ambulance corps at the front. Winspear follows Tom right into the trenches, where Kezia's letters become his chief source of relief in the midst of senseless carnage. Kezia includes detailed accounts of the delicious meals she's cooking in their old farmhouse and sends her husband lovingly prepared fruitcakes, which he shares with his grateful comrades as they try to avoid being blown to smithereens. This unsubtle juxtaposition of domesticity and depravity is typical of Winspear's unapologetically sentimental approach: In her view, the moral high ground belongs to the bakers on the home front, not the butchers on the battlefield. Too bad the heads of state responsible for the start of the Great War couldn't have settled their differences over a nice homemade dessert.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [September 28, 2014]
Review by Booklist Review

What kind of farm wife would educated Kezia Marchant make in 1914, wonders her dearest friend, Thea Brissenden? Just before Kezia marries Thea's brother, Tom, who runs the family farm, Thea gives the bride-to-be an ironic gift, The Woman's Book, the actual volume, published in 1911, that inspired this novel. As it turns out, Kezia brings a different, lighter tone to the farm, particularly in cooking, which is new to her. After Tom feels duty bound to enlist in the Great War, Kezia fills her letters with mouth-watering accounts of the meals she is preparing for him, descriptions that become ragingly popular as he reads them to members of his unit on the front lines in France. As Kezia proves proficient in managing the farm and keeping discouraging news from Tom, who has become the whipping boy of his hard-nosed sergeant, Thea, in danger of arrest for her pacifist activities, also joins the war effort. In a stand-alone departure from her popular post-WWI mystery series featuring psychologist Maisie Dobbs, Winspear has created memorable characters in a moving, beautifully paced story of love and duty.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The Great War's impact on the home front and battlefield is portrayed in Winspear's (the Maisie Dobbs series) winning stand-alone tale about two girlfriends and how their disparate lives entwine when one of them marries the other's brother. Kezia and Thea couldn't be more different: Kezia is a vicar's daughter and Thea (originally called "Dorrit"-from Dorothea-by her Dickens-loving family) grew up on the family farm as a tomboy, competing with her younger brother, Tom. Both girls were scholarship students, but it's their differences that bind them. Tensions rise when Kezia becomes engaged to Tom. Thea doubts her city-born friend can manage farm life and, as a dig, gives her The Woman's Book, a publication advising women on a variety of subjects. Excerpts from it, as well as from military manuals of the time, set up chapters told from varying points of view, including that of Edmund Hawkes, a member of the gentry and Tom's neighbor, who becomes Tom's commanding officer. Tom enlists and becomes his sergeant's whipping boy; Kezia thrives as mistress of the farm; and Thea transforms from being a suffragist and pacifist to running an ambulance on the front lines. To keep up Tom's spirits, Kezia sends letters detailing the imaginary scrumptious meals she's prepared for him, which he shares with his comrades. While questioning war's value and showing its terrible effects off the battlefield, Winspear fashions a stunning trajectory for her main characters. Agent: Amy Ren-nert, Amy Rennert Agency. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Winspear's beloved period mysteries featuring Masie Dobbs (Leaving Everything Most Loved) depict an England haunted by memories of the Great War, so it's no surprise that she uses the conflict as the backdrop to this elegiac historical, her first stand-alone novel. Kezia and Tom Brissenden have been married only a few weeks when Britain declares war on Germany on August 4, 1914. Tom enlists, leaving his town-bred bride in charge of his sprawling Kent farm. His commanding officer is Edmund Hawkes, an aristocratic neighbor whose loneliness is magnified amid the horror of the trenches. Meanwhile, Thea Brissenden, Tom's sister and Kezia's estranged best friend, volunteers as an ambulance driver on the front lines to avoid charges of sedition stemming from her involvement with a pacifist group. Kezia and Tom exchange letters full of love and well-intended deceit concocted to shield the other from anguish, while Edmund and Thea struggle to overcome self--deception and find meaning in a senseless war. -VERDICT Though this is not a mystery, -Winspear's fans should welcome the keen period detail and thoughtful tone so familiar from the Maisie Dobbs books, while historical fiction readers will be gripped by this sensitive portrayal of ordinary men and women on the home front and battlefield. [See Prepub Alert, 1/26/14; for more novels about World War I, see Mara Bandy's roundup "Battle Scars," LJ 11/1/13.-Ed.]-Annabelle Mortensen, Skokie P.L., IL (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Five kind and honorable people are caught up in the depredations of the Great War in this first stand-alone novel by the author of the Maisie Dobbs mystery series (Leaving Everything Most Loved, 2013, etc.)In 1914, as war looms, newlyweds Tom and Kezia Brissenden are making a go of the farm Tom inherited from his father, a farm that would have been part of the estate of wealthy gentleman Edmund Hawkes had not his great-grandfather lost it to Tom's great-grandfather in a darts game. Kezia, a vicar's daughter, is earnestly striving to supplant her finishing school ways with those of a farm wife, consulting a housewifery guide, The Woman's Book. Although Hawkes is attracted to Kezia, he keeps a respectful distance, just as he is cordial but not friendly toward Tom. This distance persists as Tom and Hawkes both enlist and are sent to the front line in France, where Tom, a private, serves under Capt. Hawkes. Kezia keeps Tom's spirits up with her letters describing the sumptuous meals she prepares for him in her imagination, where wartime food shortages and government inroads on the farm's production aren't problems. The whole battalion soon looks forward to her letters and the occasional fruitcake. However, Tom is scapegoated by this novel's closest thing to a villain, the cynical and embittered Sgt. Knowles, who resents the influx of so many green recruits. Meanwhile, Tom's sister (and Kezia's best friend), Thea, anguishes over whether she will be arrested for her activities as a suffragette and pacifist. Ultimately, she decides that the only way to escape government oppression is to reaffirm her loyalty: She becomes an ambulance driver at the front, where Kezia's father, Rev. Marchant, is ministering to troops in the trenches. Without questioning either the cause of the war or the dubious tactics employed, seemingly, to ensure maximum loss of life for minimal military advantage, these characters simply get on with it, reaffirming our faith in the possibility of everyday nobility.A sad, beautifully written, contemplative testament. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.