The Whispers of War is out now in paperback!

On the eve of WWII, three friends will face the ultimate test of their friendship.

The Whispers of War is now out in paperback at all fine retailers.

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In August of 1939, as Britain watches the headlines in fear of another devastating war with Germany, three childhood friends must choose between friendship or country. Erstwhile socialite Nora is determined to find her place in the Home Office’s Air Raid Precautions Department, matchmaker Hazel tries to mask two closely guarded secrets with irrepressible optimism, and German expat Marie worries that she and her family might face imprisonment in an internment camp if war is declared. When Germany invades Poland and tensions on the home front rise, Marie is labeled an enemy alien, and the three friends find themselves fighting together to keep her free at any cost.

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Join me for The Whispers of War's paperback launch party!

Join me for a launch party to celebrate the paperback release of The Whispers of War! Tomorrow (September 22) at noon ET, I’ll be holding a live Q&A session about my inspiration and research for the book, and also giving away signed copies to lucky readers. The party will be hosted through my Ask an Author Facebook group, and you can RSVP to watch live or click the Watch button after noon to see the replay!

Click here to sign up and make sure you don’t miss the fun!

Read an exclusive excerpt of The Whispers of War!

The Whispers of War is coming to paperback in North America on September 22nd. To celebrate, I’m sharing with you an exclusive excerpt of the book—the moment that Britain enters WWII and three best friends, Marie, Hazel, and Nora realize just how dangerous life in London has become for Marie, a German expat, and her family. 

She cleared her throat. “May I put the radio on?”

“Where is Henrik?” asked his father, folding the edge of his paper down to peer over the top of his spectacles.

Tante Matilda’s lips thinned again, so Marie knew her aunt had also heard her cousin fumble with the lock and stumble into the flat around two that morning.

Onkel Albrecht sighed. “I’ll wake our son. I cannot imagine anyone sleeping through this morning.”

Marie turned the dial of the large radio inside the polished walnut cabinet that stood in the corner of the room.

“Not too loud,” said her aunt immediately, as though that would somehow make the next few minutes better.

Dutifully, Marie turned the volume dial down just as the doorbell rang. She jumped, but Tante Matilda put her hand up. “Calm, calm, mein Liebchen. I will answer it.”

Marie sank down into a seat, her hands folded in her lap to keep them from trembling as the last prayers of the church service being broadcast finished. Just two minutes until the deadline.

The drawing room door swung open and a rumpled Henrik shuffled in. “You look terrible,” said Marie automatically.

He scowled at her. “Where’s Mutter?”

“She just went to answer the door,” said Marie, peering closer at him. “You almost slept through a war.”

“I wasn’t sleeping, I was just resting my eyes,” said Henrik, dramatically dropping onto the end of the sofa not occupied by his mother’s abandoned knitting.

“Marie,” called Tante Matilda, “your friends are here.”

Nora and Hazel burst into the room, their hats still perched on their heads although they’d shed their coats between the front door and the sitting room. Her aunt followed them, a pleasant smile fixed on her face.

Marie shot up out of her chair and hugged them each. “Oh, I’m so glad you’re here.”

“Miss Walcott, Mrs. Carey, it is always a pleasure to see you,” said Onkel Albrecht, switching to English out of courtesy to their guests.

“And you, Mr. Müller. I hope you don’t think us rude to come crashing in like this,” said Nora.

“Not at all,” said Onkel Albrecht. “We’re grateful you took care of Marie on Friday.”

“Nathaniel is with his mother this weekend, so I rang Nora up and told her that if there was one place we should be this morning, it’s with you,” said Hazel. “Luckily she was already halfway out the door to a cab, ready to come collect me and loop back around to Bloomsbury. I hope you don’t mind.”

“What happened on Friday?” asked Henrik.

“Nothing,” said Marie.

Her cousin narrowed his eyes, but Marie ignored him, not wanting to revisit the humiliation. It had not been the first time she’d felt anger directed at her because of her nationality. It was simply the first time her friends had seen it.

“Are you sure that—”

But Tante Matilda was cut off by Prime Minister Chamberlain’s voice crackling over the radio.

“‘I am speaking to you from the Cabinet Room of 10 Downing Street. This morning the British ambassador in Berlin handed the German government a final note, stating that unless we heard from them by eleven o’clock that they were prepared at once to withdraw their troops from Poland, a state of war would exist between us.’”

Marie’s gaze swept around the room. Tante Matilda and Onkel Albrecht gripped each other’s hands, eyes fixed on the radio as though praying Chamberlain would take it all back. Nora wore a grim look of resignation, and Hazel—Hazel was actually tearing up. Only Henrik seemed to be unaffected by the prime minister’s words that held all their lives in the balance. He sat with a leg hitched up over the arm of the sofa, rumpled and unimpressed as a nineteenth-century fop.

“‘I have to tell you now,’” the prime minister’s broadcast continued, “‘that no such undertaking has been received and that, consequently, this country is at war with Germany.’ ”

A presenter came on then, but slowly Onkel Albrecht rose to switch off the radio, his hand hesitating over the dial before turning back around to face his wife.

Mein Liebchen,” he started as tears began to roll down her face.

“You said it would not happen again,” Marie’s aunt said in German. “You said that if we moved here we would have a new life and no more war.”

“I don’t know. I don’t know what to say,” Onkel Albrecht murmured.

“Twenty-six years, Albrecht!” Tante Matilda’s voice rose. “Twenty-six! Now you know what’s going to happen to us. We’re enemies. They’ll send us away to those horrid camps they put people in like during the last war.”

Marie’s gaze cut over to her friends, both of whom stared dutifully at their hands, knowing they were witnessing a fight between husband and wife even if they couldn’t understand the language. She knew she should herd them off to her room or out of the house entirely, but she was rooted to the spot.

What will happen to me? Will I be allowed to stay? I don’t even know if I would recognize the house in Leopoldstrasse after all these years. What are we going to do?

Her breath came short and fast, and she pressed a hand to her chest over her frantically beating heart. This was Britain, a people of manners and honors and codes, yet the scars of the last war were deep. Everyone had sent their sons and brothers, husbands and cousins to fight, and so few of them returned. Marie saw the reminders every day. Veterans begging on the streets, some missing limbs or wearing half masks to hide the scars on their faces. The men who dropped their regiment casually into conversation to show they’d done their part for king and country. The furrowed brows as people calculated her age and realized that while she couldn’t possibly have been born before the last war, they still didn’t trust her.

“This wasn’t supposed to happen,” her uncle muttered again.

Henrik slammed his first down on the rolled arm of the sofa with a thud. “Who cares if Hitler runs the entire German army over Poland’s borders?”

“Henrik,” his father said sharply.

“I’m going to my club,” Henrik spat in German.

“To do what?” Marie asked.

“What do you think?”

Her aunt and uncle fighting. Henrik determined to get blotto. It was though the declaration of war had ripped open a seam, and her family was coming undone.

The unmistakable, high-pitched wail of an air raid siren cut across London.

“Oh god,” Hazel murmured, wide-eyed.

“Is it real?” Tante Matilda asked through her tears. But it was very real. They were at war. 

Preorder your copy of The Whispers of War today!

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Digital Appearance: My Writer Origin Story and an Ask an Author Q&A

This month, I headed over to Facebook to do a live Q&A with my readers and talk about books! I told my writer "origin story" and shared some of my favorite historical fiction books. I also answered reader Q&A questions and gave away books to a couple lucky viewers.

I conduct these live events on Facebook so if you want to be able to get in on giveaways and be able to ask questions in real time, follow me on Facebook and sign up for my newsletter.

Matchmaking During the War

I get a lot of questions about how I come up with my book ideas. Often the answer isn’t one lightning bolt of inspiration. Instead, it’s usually a bunch of small things rattling around in my brain that slowly come together to form an idea. 

When I wrote The Whispers of War, I knew that I wanted each of the three women at the heart of the book to have a job. (Nearly every heroine I’ve written has a job and her own income, right back to my historical romances.) Marie became a departmental secretary at a university and Nora worked in the Home Office, but Hazel...Hazel was special. 

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The idea of making Hazel a matchmaker came from the book Marriages Are Made in Bond Street: True Stories from a 1940s Marriage Bureau by Penrose Halson (also published as The Marriage Bureau). The author describes Heather Jenner and Mary Oliver, the two owners of the Marriage Bureau, who worked hard to match their clients with eligible singles out of their offices on Bond Street. Their service was discreet as people entrusted them with the intimate details of their love lives, family backgrounds, and more. They used a card system—this will be familiar to anyone who has read The Whispers of War as Hazel uses a similar system to note down her clients’ vital statistics—and they relied heavily on interviews and intuition when matching couples.

You might think that the Marriage Bureau would have closed up shop during the war because demand would have dried up, but it was quite the opposite. 

“There are so many young men wanting to marry before they go to the Front, or at any rate to have someone waiting for them when they return and to write to while they are away,” said Heather Jenner.

However, the women did temporarily relocate from their Bond Street building to a big, drafty mansion in the countryside to flee the prospect of bombing, only to be chased back because of chilly, uncomfortable conditions. 

When I read Marriage Are Made in Bond Street a couple years before writing The Whispers of War, I fell in love with the idea of two women continuing to try to give people their happily ever after, even during the war. However, that wasn’t the only inspiration I drew on. There was a brief story about a mysterious government official who came into the matchmaking office to warn the owners against German spies trying to infiltrate British society by using their services. From that little anecdote, a huge plot point of The Whispers of War was born. 

I’d you like to learn a bit more about the Marriage Bureau and matchmaking during the war, you can watch this newsreel from 1939 to see the owners in action.

Cover Reveal: Get Lost in The Last Garden in England

Welcome to a garden lost to time, overgrown with brambles and hidden away behind a locked gate for which there is no key. This garden holds secrets—the kind that can rewrite the histories of the women who have walked through it.

Welcome to The Last Garden in England…

I am thrilled to announce that my next book will be The Last Garden in England, a sweeping, poignant historical novel that crosses three time periods to bring you the story of five women tied together by a garden they love as they learn about love, friendship, grief, and acceptance.

The Last Garden in England is a poignant and heartwrenching tale of five women in three eras, whose lives are tied together by one very special place.

Present Day: Emma Lovett, who has dedicated her life to breathing new life into long-neglected gardens, has just been given the opportunity of a lifetime: to restore the gardens of the famed Highbury House, designed in 1907 by her hero Venetia Smith. But as Emma dives deeper into the garden’s past, she begins to uncover secrets that have long been hidden from history.

1907: A talented artist with a growing reputation for her ambitious work, Venetia Smith has carved out a niche for herself as a garden designer to well-to-do industrialists, solicitors, and bankers looking to show off their wealth with sumptuous country houses. She is determined to make Highbury House a triumph, but the gardens there—and the people she meets—will change her life forever.

1944: When land girl Beth Pedley arrives at a farm on the outskirts of the village of Highbury, all she wants is to find a place she can call home, while cook Stella Adderton could not be more desperate to leave Highbury House pursue her own dreams. Diana Symonds, a widow and the mistress of the grand house, is desperately trying to cling to her pre-war life now that Highbury House has been requisitioned to become a convalescent hospital for wounded soldiers. But when war threatens the gardens at Highbury House, these three women are drawn together by a secret that will last decades.

The Last Garden in England explores the unexpected connections that can cross time and the special places that can bind us together in unbreakable bonds.

The Last Garden in England will be out January 2021 at all fine retailers.

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Ask an Author Q&A and a Closer Look at The Last Garden in England

I loved talking to readers about the reading and writing process and—most importantly—sharing the cover of my 2021 release, The Last Garden in England! If you missed the live event, you can now watch the full video/.

If you missed the If you’d like to learn more about The Last Garden in England, you can register your interest, get preorder details, and find out exclusive behind-the-scenes content here: https://landing.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/b9d9q4

The Whispers of War Is Getting a New Look!

I'm very excited to share with you the brand-new cover for the upcoming North American paperback edition of The Whispers of War!

The paperback featuring this version of the cover hits US shelves this fall. As much as I loved the hardcover look, I adore the fact that The Whispers of War will share some cover DNA with The Light Over London. (I think they look fantastic together!)

If you’d like to preorder your copy of this brand-new cover, you can at all fine retailers ahead of its September release.

AmazonApple Books | Kobo | B&N | Google Play | Bookshop

I'd love to hear what you think of the new look! Just leave a comment on this post to let me know.

Also, newsletter subscribers got news of this brand-new cover a month ago. If you want to be the first to know about my books and to receive special behind-the-scenes looks before anyone else, sign up for my newsletter: https://landing.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/i4g2n8

Virtual Reader Event: Book Club Favorites with Kristin Harmel

I’ve been incredibly lucky this spring to have not one but two digital events with the incredibly talented historical fiction author Kristin Harmel! Simon & Schuster invited us on to their Book Club Favorites group for a Facebook live where we talked about Kristin’s next book, The Book of Lost Names, as well as my recent release The Whispers of War. We also chatted about research and why WWII is having a moment in fiction, and we took plenty of live questions from readers!

You can watch the entire video below. I do live digital reader events like this from time to time, so if you want to keep up to date on when the next one is be sure to sign up for my newsletter: https://landing.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/i4g2n8

Podcast: You’re Never Going to Read This Is Back!

Long-term readers will know that I’ve hosted a podcast with my sister, the talented BookTuber Justine from I Should Read That, since 2018. We took a little hiatus, but now I’m very happy to say...we’re back!

In our return episode, we talk about how our book reading and buying habits have changed in the pandemic. Plus we’re back to our old ways, recommending a book to each other each. (Even though Justine never reads my recommendations…)

You can listen to the podcast by subscribing to You’re Never Going to Read This on your podcast app of choice, or by going to yourenevergoingtoreadthis.com. 

And don’t forget, you can always keep up to date with the latest about my books as well as behind-the-scenes exclusives by signing up for my newsletter: https://landing.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/i4g2n8

Lessons from the Past...Indulging a Sweet Tooth During the War

When I started hearing stories about shortages of baking staples like flour and yeast due to high demand, I couldn’t help thinking about all of the WWII rationing recipes I’ve read as part of my research. Rationing seriously restricted the ability of people in Britain to get access to certain basic ingredients like white flour, butter, and sugar. 

The Stork Margarine Cookery Service’s excellent set of pamphlets has an entire group of recipes meant to satisfy your sweet tooth on rations. It does begin with an explanation of making dripping, so be warned that it might not be the heart-healthiest group of recipes in the world.

Enjoy these sweet treats!

Two people’s weekly ration for milk, sugar, butter, bacon, cheese, and chocolate in 1943. (Image courtesy of the Imperial War Museum.)

Two people’s weekly ration for milk, sugar, butter, bacon, cheese, and chocolate in 1943. (Image courtesy of the Imperial War Museum.)

Ginger Fruit Cake

12 oz self-rising flour

3 reconstituted dried eggs

2 tblsp jam

4oz prunes, weighed before stoning

2-3 oz dripping, cooked fat, or margarine

2 heaped tsps ground ginger

1 heaped tsp Mixed spice

½ bicarbonate of soda

½ tsp salt

¼ pint water

Sieve the flour, salt, ginger, space into a bowl. Stone and chop prunes, and put into a saucepan with the fat, jam, and water. Bring to a boil and simmer for 3 minutes. Cool, make a well in the flour. Pour in. Dissolve the bicarbonate of soda in the reconstituted egg. Add the flour, mix quickly, put into a cake tin lined with greasepaper and brushed with melted fat, and bake for 1 ¼ hours in a moderately hot oven.

Oatmeal Scones

4 oz oatmeal

4 oz self-raising flour

1 oz dripping, cooking fat, or margarine

¼ tsp salt

Water to mix

Sieve the flour and salt together. Add the oatmeal. Rub in the fat and mix to a fairly soft doub with about 1 pint of cold water. On a floured board, knead and roll out to ¼ inch thick and cut into small shapes. Place on a greased baking sheet and bake for 25 minutes in a hot oven.

Virtual Reader Event: Our View from Here

As difficult as the pandemic has been, one of the things I’ve been heartened to see is the way that authors and readers have been reaching out virtually. 

I was thrilled to round out the month of April with the incredible historical fiction authors Genevieve Graham, Kristin Harmel, Jennifer Robson, Roxanne Veletzos, and Ellen Keith as part of the Our View from Here Facebook Live reader event! We opened the floor to questions from readers, and they asked plenty! 

If you missed the event, you’re in luck. It’s recorded and available to watch here:

I’ll be doing more events like Our View from Here, so be sure to like my Facebook page to be sure you don’t miss out!

Lessons from the Past...Tea Time During War

When I started hearing stories about shortages of baking staples like flour and yeast due to high demand, I couldn’t help thinking about all of the WWII rationing recipes I’ve read as part of my research. Rationing serious restricted the ability of people in Britain to get access to certain basic ingredients like white flour, butter, and sugar. 

I’ve done a little dive into my research files, and found a gem of a pamphlet from the Stork Margarine Cookery Service called “Tea-Time in War-Time” from March 1943. The company writes, “We are giving you various tea-time, high-tea savouries and salad recipes, all of which are very easy on your rationed ingredients and will help you save bread.” It goes on to say that cooked potatoes are used in most of these recipes as a base.

Here are just a few recipes if you’re feeling particularly ambitious during your self-isolation.

An RAF and WAAF cook. (Image courtesy of the Imperial War Museum.)

An RAF and WAAF cook. (Image courtesy of the Imperial War Museum.)

Potato Pastry Savoury Tarts

6oz mashed potatoes

3oz self-rising flour

1 1/2oz margarine or cooking fat

Pinch of salt

Sieve flour and salt into a bowl. Rub in the margarine. Add the potato and rub in. Press together until the mixture forms a ball and leaves the sides of the basin clean. No water for mixing needed. Roll out thinly on a floured board. Cut into rounds and put into well-greased patty tins as for jam tarts. Put about a teaspoonful and a half of salmon and anchovy filling in each and bake 30 to 40 minutes in a moderately hot oven. 

Salmon and Anchovy Filling

4 tblsps mashed potato

4 tblsps salmon and anchovy filling

A little household milk

Seasoning if needed

Mix the fish paste and potato well together with a little household milk until the mixture is smooth and free from lumps and is of a spreading consistency. Add seasoning if required.

A Podcast to Listen to…Unspooled

I have a deep, unflagging love of films from Hollywood’s Golden Age. I like to attribute this to seeing Lauren Bacall seduce Humphery Bogart over a match in To Have and Have Not when I was a teenager, although my countless viewings of a PBS broadcast of Singing in the Rain taped onto VHS is probably really to blame. Either way, I’ve recently been craving interesting, intelligent conversation about some of my favorite films. 

If you are like me and enjoy taking apart the movies you love to see how they work, I cannot recommend the podcast Unspooled enough. Actor Paul Scheer and critic Amy Nicholson are working their way through the American Film Institute’s Top 100 movies and both offer fun, funny, insightful commentary about some of my favorite films. I recommend starting at the beginning episode 1 on Citizen Kane and working your way through the list as you watch along, but I really wanted to shout out the fantastic conversation around Rear Window, a movie that feels particularly appropriate for our current self-isolation age.

Publishing Dreams and Breaking News: Getting “The Call”

Every traditionally published author* has a story about “The Call.” It’s the moment that their agent or an editor gives them a ring or sends them an email to let them know that they are about to become a published author.** 

I got the call when I was at work for a now-defunct news website. I was an evening breaking news editor, and I’d just heard that there might be a fire on 13th Street just below Union Square and near NYU. I’d just sent a reporter downtown to check it out when an email from my agent dinged to my inbox. Do you have a few minutes to talk? :) 

Some context, my agent knew that I had a full-time job. She was always incredibly respectful of that and never called during working hours without asking first, so I knew this was a big deal. And she’d put a smiley face. This was clearly serious business. 

I was fairly protective of running a breaking news story from end to end, but I emailed her back immediately to say yes call whenever please call, and asked/told my colleague to cover for me. Then I stepped into a conference room. 

My agent rang. An imprint of Simon & Schuster wanted to publish the long novella I’d written, The Governess Was Wicked. That wasn’t all. They also wanted to publish the next two books in the same series I’d pitched along with it. They were offering me a three-book deal. I think that’s the point where I nearly expired on the spot. I’d been waiting four years and several books that never got off the ground to finally sell a book and a publisher wanted to take three books at once. And pay me for it. 

My agent ran quickly through the rest of the deal and promised to send more information via email so I could get back to breaking news. I was shaking when I called my parents in London. (Mum picked up because Dad was already asleep, but I’m 99% sure she woke him up as soon as I jumped off the phone a few minutes later.) Then I silently screamed, took a deep breath, composed myself, and went straight back to my desk to finish the breaking news story. (The first was “knocked down” quickly, no one was hurt, and there’s as minimal property damage.)

In some ways, it’s particularly fitting that my call came during breaking news. I started writing when I was a graduate student attending journalism school. I balanced the two careers as best as anyone can balance news and writing for years, once even finishing edits on a camp bed pushed under the desk of a cubicle at my TV station because a self-published book I was working was due in the middle of a major snowstorm. 

I also like telling this story for a couple reasons:

  1. It proves that one of my mother’s favorite expressions—”an overnight success 10 years in the making”—is very true. On the outside, it looks like I got a three-book deal on my first go when in reality it took many attempts to find the right book for the right editor. I went out to market in 2012. I sold in 2015. And that’s not even a particularly long time to wait in publishing. Those three years of waiting felt very, very long, but in the end, I’m glad I kept my faith because it was the right move for me. 

  2. The good things in life don’t always come at the most convenient times. I think, in my imagination, I assume I was going to be lounging on a chaise in an evening dress when my Call came. Instead, I was stress sweating while trying to get information out of the FDNY and hurrying my agent off the phone. One of the most important calls of my writing career was actually really inconvenient, but that’s sometimes what balancing a writing and work life is like. You just have to figure out a way to make it work. (And know that there’s no shame in asking for help.) 

If your dream is to be published by a big New York publisher, I hope you keep submitting and talking to agents, but most of all I hope you keep working because you love writing. 

Oh, and the fire? There was no damage or injuries, so really it all worked out for everyone in the end.

*Those of us who put out books with a publisher rather than through self-publishing. 

**If the author chooses to accept the publisher’s offer, which is another matter entirely.

Lessons from the Past...The British Red Cross in World War I

Watching the wonderful thanks I’ve been seeing for nurses, doctors, and other carers working during the pandemic, I can’t help thinking about all of the incredible work that the Voluntary Aid Dispatch, British Red Cross, and Queen Alexandra’s Royal Army Corps did during World War II. Part of my 2021 release will be set in a convalescent hospital set up in a requisitioned manor house, so I’ve been doing a deep dive into the history of all three of those organizations. However, it’s a piece of history from World War I that I wanted to share with you in case you’re interested in researching a bit of your own family’s history.

Over 90,000 people—many of them women—volunteered for the British Red Cross during World War I, and there is a database where you can search for your relatives. (There is also the option to search for a local hospital so you can find out more about war efforts in your area.) In many cases, the information comes up with an image of the volunteer’s Voluntary Aid Dispatch card and additional information attached to the record.

Courtesy of the British Red Cross

Courtesy of the British Red Cross

Even if you don’t have have direct connections to the British Red Cross, the site is worth a look because it’s full of incredible, heartening information about how normal people did extraordinary things that helped heal the wounded who came back to Britain from the battlefields of France.

A Book to Read...Lady in Waiting by Anne Glenconner

I love a book with a lengthy subtitle, and Lady in Waiting: My Extraordinary Life in the Shadow of the Crown, by Anne Glenconner has an excellent one. A light, breezy memoir by Lady Glenconner, one of Princess Margaret’s ladies and waiting, this book is like stepping into another world because Lady Glenconner’s England is not our own. For many years, her life seemed to consist of social engagements, galas, and charity dos. But that doesn’t mean that Lady Glenconner’s life was not without difficulties or that she doesn’t have insightful things to say about the world she grew up in.

And yes, for those of you who love The Crown, this is probably going to be even more fun for you.

A Time to Escape

To say that it’s not an easy time in the would would be a laughable understatement. I know that a lot of people are going through difficulties and many more are living in fear of what might happen to them, to their loved ones, to all of us.

I’ve talked before about my former career as a New York City journalist. In that job, you’re exposed to some of the very worst of humanity. (And I was a producer for years so I had the privilege of being back in the studio, watching a feed come in while the reporters were confronting these things in-person.) Even now, people will sometimes ask me how I dealt with writing all of those horrible stories, and I always have the same answer: I have a fundamental belief that most people are inherently good and decent.

In the midst of this pandemic, I’m heartened by what I’ve seen around me. Nurses, doctors, carers, delivery people, grocery store employees—so many people continue to work tirelessly to try to help others. My neighbors have banded together to create a volunteer group to identify vulnerable people in need of a helping hand or to simply check in on one another and make sure we’re all okay. I feel more connected to some long-time friends who I rarely get to see thanks to phone calls, texts, and video chats. People are coming out of the woodwork to help. To connect.

Here in Britain, as politicians and the health authority ask people to pull together for the collective good, it’s hard not to think about World War II. It’s an indisputable fact that not everything was sunshine and roses during the war. All you have to do is read Joshua Levin’s excellent book The Secret History of the Blitz to know that in wartime some people were still happy to cheat, lie, and steal their way through life. No amount of propaganda from the Ministry of Information could squash crime and guarantee all people adhered to the idea of the collective stiff upper lip. However, I do think that the overall message rings true today: We’re all in this together.

I had such a lovely response from readers of my newsletter after I recommended a handful of comfort reads, that I thought I might continue in that vein for a little while by making this section of my website into a bit of a recommendation engine. This will include a mixture of book and pop culture recommendations, recipes, interesting tidbits that I’ve found through my research, and more.

Please always feel free to comment me and let me know what you think of my picks. If you would like to sign up for my newsletter, you can click here.

Stay safe and spend some time escaping into books, movies, TV shows, and more.