An Inspiring Historical Page-Turner: Read an Extract from The Little Wartime Library by Kate Thompson

An Inspiring Historical Page-Turner: Read an Extract from The Little Wartime Library by Kate Thompson

An old woman walks up the westbound platform of Bethnal Green Underground station, moving painfully slowly on account of her arthritis.

‘Mum, can we go?’ asks her eldest daughter Miranda, trying to hide her irritation. She has an Ocado delivery due later and she’s dying for a coffee. ‘We shouldn’t be on public transport, not in the middle of a pandemic.’

‘Tsk.’ Her mother waves her walking stick dismissively. ‘You go if you like, but I’m not leaving.’

Miranda glances over at her younger sister Rosemary and rolls her eyes. God their mother could be tricky. ‘All piss and vinegar,’ as her ex-husband once memorably described her.

‘At the very least Mum, pull your mask up over your nose,’ Rosemary orders. But the older lady ignores them both, moving with
a tortoise like determination.

They reach the end of the platform and all pause, staring into the gaping black mouth of the tunnel.

‘We clean our transport network regularly with antiviral disinfectant,’ mutters the old lady, reading out loud from a poster pasted to the tunnel wall. ‘That’s nothing new. They did this nightly during the war.’

‘You came here in the war?’ asks Miranda, thoughts of her latte fast fading.

‘We lived down here.’ Their mother smiles, her face slightly crooked since the stroke. ‘Your auntie Marie even took tap-dancing
classes down here.’ Miranda presses her lips together, worried.

‘You’re getting confused, Mum. People only slept down here during the Blitz.’

‘I might have snow on the roof, but I’ve still got all my marbles!’ the old lady barks, her voice stiletto sharp. She loves her daughters desperately, but she wishes they didn’t keep on doing this, fussing over her, checking her constantly for signs of senility.

She closes her eyes. Intrusive thoughts march through her brain like a brass band. Heat. Blood. Smoke…

Continue reading the extract here…

Buy a copy of The Little Wartime Library here.

Reviews

A Love Letter to Libraries: Read Our Review of The Little Wartime Library by Kate Thompson

Review | Our Review

21 February 2022

A Love Letter to Libraries: Read Our Review of The Little Wartime Library by Kate Thompson

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      Publisher details

      The Little Wartime Library
      Author
      Kate Thompson
      Publisher
      Hachette
      Genre
      Fiction
      Released
      22 February, 2022
      ISBN
      9781529395402

      Synopsis

      A gripping and heart-wrenching novel set in London in World War Two, following the two women who run a secret underground library

      London, 1944.

      Clara Button is no ordinary librarian. While the world remains at war, in East London Clara has created the country's only underground library, built over the tracks in the disused Bethnal Green tube station. Down here a secret community thrives: with thousands of bunk beds, a nursery, a cafe and a theatre offering shelter, solace and escape from the bombs that fall above.

      Along with her glamorous best friend and library assistant Ruby Munroe, Clara ensures the library is the beating heart of life underground. But as the war drags on, the women's determination to remain strong in the face of adversity is tested to the limits when it seems it may come at the price of keeping those closest to them alive.

      Based on true events, The Little Wartime Library is a gripping and heart-wrenching page-turner that remembers one of the greatest resistance stories of the war.

      Kate Thompson
      About the author

      Kate Thompson

      Kate Thompson an award-winning journalist, ghostwriter and novelist who has spent the past two decades in the UK mass market and book publishing industry. Over the past seven years Kate has written nine fiction and non-fiction titles, three of which have made the Sunday Times top ten bestseller list. Secrets of the Homefront Girls will be her tenth book.

      Books by Kate Thompson

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