Don't follow the crowd,' she'd be telling schoolgirls at the swimming baths. 'Follow your own star and when you have achieved your goal you will have that with you for the rest of your life...'
In 1928, a plucky young Welsh girl named Ida Gaze swims the Bristol Channel with the help of her best friend Freda and the inspiration of her heroine Amelia Earhart. In 1937, on the instructions of the matron, a young skivvy at a grand maternity hospital in London smuggles out an orphaned baby on one of the coldest nights of the year.
Now, in a small town in Wales, an old lady named Ceci pieces together these stories and is about to discover the surprising ways in which they link to her own. It begins with two girls in the twenties who left their small Welsh village for the Big Smoke, feeling that the world was changing and everything was possible…
My thoughts:
This book takes place in modern times when Cecily thanks to a new friend starts to wonder who a girl in a photo is. All things will come together in the end but the question was how. And that had me wondering.
In 1928 Ida and Freda are 16 and thinking about their futures. Or more like it trying not to think too much about it as parents nag. Ida loves to swim and wants to be free, but being like this she still seems to be the one who has the most to lose. While Freda is a bit more guarded, but at the same time she does not care at all what others think and is free with her emotions and feelings. Feelings towards her friend too. They are quite opposites in a way but they are both outsiders and friendship blossom. We follow them through trying times.
From the start I know that Cecily knew Freda, but she never knew Ida. So this old lady is trying to put the pieces back together. All while I am wondering about 1937 and the baby, but we get to that again and slowly the story unfolds. What really happened. And it's both sad and heartbreaking.
The title comes from the wonder girl that Ida was and that Freda too was. And they were go-getters in their own ways. But the book also shows that even if you have everything then something might still be missing. It's also a beautiful tale about friendship, first Freda and Ida, and then how a young woman named Sarah befriends Cecily and starts asking questions. Friendship through the ages is what the book is about, and how people can change. And of course it's also about those early women who broke boundaries and went where only men had gone before.
Conclusion:
A good story about now and then, and quite the mystery too as the story comes to us as the years go by.
Genre: Fiction (historical)......................................
Pages: 416
Published: June 7th 2012 by Simon and Schuster UK
Source: For review
I am a guest over at Layers of Thought today so come on by and say hello :) I am being interviewed about books and writing :)
This sounds like an intriguing read. I like books that link together the past and present :)
ReplyDeleteGreat Review!
Thanks :)
DeleteIt sure had me guessing, and then knowing and then doubting
I really like books that skip between the present and the past. I need to check this one out. Great review. Now I'm heading over to Layers of Thought for your interview.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy :)
DeleteI like them too, well if they are done well like this one
I love books that interweave the present with the past like that. This sounds good!
ReplyDeleteI think you would enjoy it
DeleteI don't think I ever read a book like that but I confess, it's intriguing.
ReplyDeleteHave I...hm, I do not know either :)
Deletethis sounds really cool! i wonder if it's available in the us.
ReplyDeleteIf not now, then soon
DeleteI like it!
ReplyDeleteOh that one, yup I remember seeing it around and it sounded very interesting :D
ReplyDeleteI love the title! Sounds like a great book!
ReplyDeleteA very nice title indeed :=)
DeleteThis one sounds really intriguing.
ReplyDeleteIt sure was :)
DeleteI don't read too much historical fiction, but I love a story with a strong friendship at the forefront. Thanks for the recommendation!
ReplyDeleteAnd that it was, friendship everywhere
DeleteThis one sounds good Blod, I like stories about friendship.
ReplyDeleteI like those stories too :)
DeleteI thought the post title was a math equation at first. ;)
ReplyDeleteEh..ok, lol
DeleteSounds like a good read to some, but it's just not my kind of read...
ReplyDeleteNot the book for everyone in the end
DeleteThis sounds like a good one! Thanks for sharing it!
ReplyDeleteOf course :)
DeleteOh this does sound very good. Glad you enjoyed it. :)
ReplyDeleteIt's always good with fiction now and then
DeleteThis sounds like a good chick lit book to really get into. I love it when it goes across time like that. Plus, I do like that cover. Somehow it fits and intrigues me...
ReplyDeleteIda swims and it fits the era :=)
DeleteGlad you enjoyed it! I agree with Melissa...the cover is nice and it really matches the story.
ReplyDeleteThey did really well there
DeleteThis one sounds good!!
ReplyDelete:)
DeleteI love the sound of this one...and I loved the interview! :)
ReplyDeleteHow did you cope B reading all that sadness and heartbreak? LOL Hope there was a happy ending. I'll keep an eye out for it.
ReplyDeleteI was sad :/ You do know I love my happiness, sadness well it makes me sad ;) But I knew something good would come out of it
DeleteI love books like this, though I'm just discovering this. I like how the past and present eventually comes together. I'm also interested in learning more about this friendship.
ReplyDeleteFriendship is always good to read about :=) I do love it
DeleteI hadn't heard of this one before but it's definitely the kind of story I gravitate towards. Glad you enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteI do think you would enjoy this one
Delete