Why did I love this book?
Just when I thought fiction about World War II had grown stale, I came across Joanna Quinn’s marvelous historical novel.
It opens on a family estate in the English countryside in the aftermath of World War I. The three finely drawn main characters—precocious, determined half-siblings—are basically raising themselves. They share a love of literature and spend their time putting on plays for their friends, family, and neighbors.
As they grow into young adulthood, they are confronted with the brutality of World War II, and each makes a choice about how to help their country.
Quinn deploys lush language to create evocative settings and compelling storylines and has managed to cast a fresh look on the era that says much about how people are affected by war—and by love.
5 authors picked The Whalebone Theatre as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
'THE BOOK OF THE SUMMER' Sunday Times
'A tour de force' Sarah Winman, author of Still Life
This is the story of an old English manor house by the sea, with crumbling chimneys, draping ivy and a library full of dusty hardbacks. It's the story of the three children who grow up there, and the adventures they create for themselves while the grown-ups entertain endless party guests.
This is the story of a whale that washes up on a beach, whose bones are claimed by a twelve-year-old girl with big ambitions and an even bigger imagination. An unwanted orphan who…