Christmas at the Foyles Bookshop. Elaine Roberts. 2019. 297 pages. [Source: Review copy]
First
sentence: Victoria Appleton’s slender fingers clutched the brown
envelope in her coat pocket, while the other hand gripped the wooden
handle of her black umbrella.
Premise/plot: This historical
holiday-themed romance has a light and breezy feel to it despite its
world war one setting. Readers should know from the start that it is the
third book in a series. The Foyles Bookshop Girls, The Foyles Bookshop
Girls At War and then Christmas at the Foyles Bookshop. There is a cast
of characters that I'm guessing appear in all the books. The three
"main" characters are Victoria, Molly, and Alice. Molly and Alice are
married and engaged or engaged and married. One is married with one
child and another on the way. The other is engaged and very soon to be
married. By the end of the book, she's married. Sadly, I can't really
remember which is which.
Victoria, the primary main character,
is going through her parents' belongings (after seven years of waiting
for no particular reason), volunteering at a local hospital for
wounded/recovering soldiers, missing her one-true-love that stopped
writing her ages ago, and enjoying her new responsibilities at the
bookshop.
The book focuses on the daily lives of the characters.
Very little "big" happenings occur. Many, many "teeny-tiny" ones do.
For some readers, this means NOTHING happens. But not all readers,
perhaps. Sometimes you go on journeys WITH the characters as company.
My
thoughts: I didn't mind the slow pacing. I didn't. What I minded a
little more was the constant changing focus. I'm not sure you'd say this
one has multiple point of view characters. But I'm not sure you
wouldn't couldn't say that. It was a bit of a guess at any time WHO the
focus would be on and why. This being the third book in the series there
wasn't much attachment to any of the characters, especially at the
beginning. If I had read the previous two books, I imagine that I would
CARE from page one and be instantly drawn into the story. I saw the plot
twist coming from miles and miles away. I think any reader could. The
book lacks all subtlety there. But even so, I won't spoil the book here
in the review. It takes the characters in the book a couple of hundred
pages to know what readers essentially know from the first few chapters.
I liked the focus on daily life. I liked the small details, the
small things that make life, LIFE. If I had access to the previous two
books via library, I would definitely read those and catch up on their
lives.
© 2019 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
1 comment:
Maybe I'll try the first book in this series before deciding if I want to read this one.
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