Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Kate Thompson”
Review: The Wartime Book Club
Reading was the only true form of joy and solace, the only intellectual freedom they still possessed and they cherished it like life itself.
Another fabulous wartime novel from Kate Thompson, featuring a library and its brave librarian. Her previous novel, [b:The Little Wartime Library|61237143|The Little Wartime Library|Kate Thompson|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1670914289l/61237143.SY75.jpg|94074671] is set in London during the war, and features the underground library at Bethnal Green. I highly recommend it!
The island of Jersey may be physically closer to France than to England but it is English soil. In June 1940 the German army invaded the island, occupying it until the island was liberated, a day after the offical Liberation Day of 8 May 1945. During those almost 5 years the small community learn to rely on their library, St Helier Public Library and its librarian, Grace La Mottee to provide them with blessed relief and escape from the deprivations of occupation.
It is well known that the Nazis burnt books. Grace is ordered to hand over any books they considered inappropriate, but like any good librarian, she hid them in her library, an action that could see her shot by the occupiers. Each chapter features a banned book and the reason for their being banned: Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens because it featured Jewish characters: anything by Ernest Hemingway, as he was considered a ‘corrupting foreign influence’; Emil and the Detectives by Erich Kastner because it was ‘contrary to the German spirit’ and many more.
To help raise spirits, Grace forms a book club: the Wartime Book Club. Each week she reads aloud to the many citizens who crowd into her library. Some of them have never read a book before; certainly never entertained the thought of reading poetry. This small act of kindness and solidarity is a lifeline, helping everyone forget for a couple of hours their hunger and worries. ‘It was the feeling of companionship, the collective act of reading, which had made them all feel as if their suffering were a shared endeavour. The sense that somehow, their literary gatherings were protecting them from the occupation. Nestled in the sanctuary of the library, words flowing over and around them, had kept real life at bay.’
Grace’s best friend Bea Rose is also defying the Nazis. She is a postal worker, and uses her access to the mail to remove poison pen letters written by disgruntled villagers revealing their neighbours’ ruling-breaking. She held the letters long enough to alert the accused person to destroy any evidence before delivering them to the head of the German Secret Field Police in Jersey. The war may have brought out the best in some people, but it also brought out the worst in others.
There are so many individuals in this book whose bravery is breathtaking. Simple people, acting in extraordinary ways. Thompson makes these people come to life.
There are copious notes at the end of the book which I recommend you read. They give you further information about the occupation. There are also book group questions; a reading list; recipes; further details about the real people that Thompson used for inspiration for her characters; places to visit on Jersey Island and a bibliography.
This is an engrossing historic novel, highlighting the story of ordinary people’s courage and resistance in a time of war. Unputdownable and highly recommended.
Review: The Little Wartime Library
This book is a love-letter to libraries, and all who work in them. It is based on the extraordinary true story of the Bethnal Green underground library, built over the tracks in the disused Bethnal Green tube station, after the original library was destroyed on the first day of the London blitz on September 7, 1940. Together with the library, there were thousands of bunk beds, a theatre, a nursery and a cafe. This was home to East Enders fleeing the horror above ground.
Thompson covers a lot of ground in this novel, including the heated arguments surrounding the role of libraries: should they only stock ‘quality’ books that will ‘educate and edify’, or should they provide books of a more popular nature? During the war years, what women (and it was nearly all women as the men were fighting) really wanted, was escapism. ‘Books were time machines, whisking women away from the crash and the horror of the war.’ We have seen the same trend during the pandemic, with readers choosing ‘escapist’ fiction to take them as far away from the current situation as possible.
The author has skilfully drawn this cramped, underground world with all its noise and aromas, full of memorable characters. The constant fear of death and destruction is palpable. And it’s the library that is the beating heart of the community, providing a safe place for everyone, young and old, rich or poor, educated or not. As Thompson writes in her Author’s Note: ‘A library is the only place you can go - from cradle to grave - that is free, safe, democratic and no one will try to flog you anything. It’s the heartbeat of a community, offering precious resources to people in need. It’s a place just to be, to dream and to escape - with books.’
Highly recommended for historic fiction lovers, book-lovers, and library lovers.