Band of Sisters

Ahhhh historical fiction. Not my favorite genre but I shove historical fiction titles in the library book bag on occasion. Now you think a person who studied history at university, has a BA in History, is a Phi Alpha Theta member and briefly considered graduate school, would love her some historical fiction. And also have a grasp of English grammar but I never claimed to be an English major now did I?

But back to historical fiction. A person would think I would be cramming all the historical fiction like setting a new world record for eating Lindt truffles. That person would be wrong.

I prefer actual history books and biographies and when I do read historical fiction it tends to be modern person finds documents/diaries of historical figure and then we get alternating chapters of modern person, historical person, modern person. And I end up getting bored to pieces by modern person and just wanting to read only the historical person unless it’s very well written.

And if your historical fiction is the secret life of very famous historical person, for example you’re the poor but gorgeous gal who has Prince Edward (later the Duke of Windsor)’s love child? Or you’re the noble but poor mistress of Henry VIII? I. AM. OUT.

I have opinions. Strong opinions. And my bar for historical fiction is set pretty damn high. Especially now as the vast age of fifty looms not too far in the horizon. Not even the brilliant Fay Weldon gets a pass. And Fay Weldon is a goddess who wrote the pilot episode of Upstairs, Downstairs.

Let’s jump to yesterday morning around 3 am. Normally I’m in a half-awake state, knowing I need to crawl from my warm bed and summon the strength to be functional enough to start my work day at 6 am. My life is most glamorous.

But it is a Saturday morning and I’ve just put Lauren Willig’s Band of Sisters down. Not to shove in the library return bag unfinished. And not to read after running errands. Down as in done and dusted. Finished. With thoughts. Perhaps barely literate but thoughts.

In a nutshell, Band of Sisters is the tale of gentle reared rich ladies going off to provide support and comfort in World War I France. Well, not everyone is rich (hi there working class Irish/Bohemian Kate) and they all attended Smith College.

Now for those unfamiliar, Smith College is one of the Seven Sisters, historically women’s colleges which are considered equivalent to the Ivy League. I was not clever enough for Smith College but that is a tale for another time.

Our heroines have left Smith College and are whipped into a fervor by a former professor who wants to send a unit of Smith women over to France to serve the French citizens. The plan is to provide aid, restoring villages and the inhabitants spirit without the burden of charity. Very lofty goals.

After all, anyone can join the Red Cross efforts, handing out donuts and cigarettes to Our Brave Boys. But it takes a strong person, A Smith College Girl, to be boots on the ground, down in the trenches, getting things done. Not afraid to muss her hair or get dirty. Nails will be broken.

Hmm…I’m sounding very gung ho and like I’ve meet that professor. Interesting.

Will the Smith College alumnae respond to the former professor’s siren call and find themselves in France? Yes because that’s the plot of the book.

Of course, there are tensions, secrets and deprivation galore. It’s World War I France once the Americans joined. Unlike many historical fiction books, Band of Sisters isn’t all dances with Our Brave Boys, Finding True Love While The Battle Rages Off Screen.

Frankly? I loathe those historical fiction books. If you like those books. Glad you found something to read that brings you joy but I prefer a much heartier fare.

Band of Sisters is that heartier fare. There is some romance, but you never forget the trenches are mere miles away and the treat of Germans/the Boche is very nearby. The French countryside is both beautiful and destroyed right down to the people. Still alive but shells of themselves. And the Smith Girls aren’t immune. They are so very innocent in their mostly privileged bubbles it hurts yet shells of themselves. One character has such an obsidian hard shell you think she is just a snotty bitch but nope. Oh golly nope. Another character needs to have the very concept of a “Boche baby” explained.

At that point, yes, I gave a deep sigh, because honestly how did she think a very young French girl was impregnated with said baby. Thank heavens she learns a thing or two before the book ends because the last quarter of the book is brutal and merciless. The devastation, terror and exhaustion are so truthfully and beautifully written you are in the horde, barely awake and still pressing on because you can’t succumb.

After devouring Band of Sisters, I can say it’s a gripping read and even if you want to shake perhaps Maud until her teeth rattle (I will help you with that! Maud does my head in something awful), have one character teach a class on self-defense before sitting Emmie down for a reality check, it’s hard to put down. And read everything. Don’t skip the stuff everyone does.

 Seriously, READ THE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS! Lauren Willig based her book on real Smith College women who were in the Somme. How could I not love a book by an author who stumbles and gobbles books like myself? Her fictional band of sisters Smith College alumnae are just as real and a force of nature as the Smith College alumnae I encountered as in my youth.

Would I recommend Band of Sisters? Most certainly!

The Ashford Affair

It’s 9:05 am, Saturday morning. The library has just opened and I’m cruising by the Rapid Read (7 days loan, no holds) section and what do I spy with my little hazel eyes? A lovely new Lauren Willig book called The Ashford Affair. So into the library bag it goes!

The Ashford Affair tells the stories of New Yorker lawyer Clementine and her beloved grandmother Addie. Until her grandmother’s 99th birthday party, Clementine had no idea the secrets Addie was hiding. As Clementine learns more about her family including a mysterious death in African savannah, we see Addie’s story starting as a 6-year-old orphan taken in by her late father’s half-brother, the Earl of Ashford. The frightened Addie is befriended by her cousin, Bea and the two girls vow to be more than sisters to each other. But just how far does this bond last as they grow up and betrayal enters the picture. (Side note: my clever lizard brain was all “NO! You mean BEA-trayal!” Too true lizard brain, too true). Clementine’s story is interesting but it’s the story of Addie and Bea that captives you. You know Clementine will find happiness as her life starts to implode. But will Addie and Bea?

The Ashford Affair is one of those books where if you have the proper background reading, the story springs into 3-D. I’ve been reading Elsa Lanchester’s autobiography and there is a bit in The Ashford Affair where Addie and Bea are night-clubbing and my lizard brain was convinced the cousins ended up at Lanchester’s infamous Cave of Harmony at one point. And when Addie arrives in Kenya and Bea is blithely pointing out “oh there’s Alice de Janze” and “dinner at Dina’s”, the person whose read about the Happy Valley set just knows everything they need to about Bea’s character and that scandal is ahead.

And this is going to sound crazy but I meant it in the very best way. Lauren Willig’s The Ashford Affair reminds me of Kathleen Tessaro’s The Debutante and The Perfume Collectoto the point that I forget who the author was with its careful blend of life between the wars and our modern times. It’s always a lovely surprise to have an author be able to move beyond their comfort zone (Willig’s best-selling Napoleonic-era spy series). Another lovely surprise is reading the Acknowledgements and finding out Frances Osborne’s The Bolter, a biography of the infamous (and Happy Valley resident) Lady Idina Gordon, inspired The Ashford Affair.

It could be easy to dismiss The Ashford Affair as just another chick-lit book about hidden family secrets pretending to be literature. But Lauren Willig’s careful research and deft hand raise The Ashford Affair above the regular chick-lit genre. And will inspire you to read more about the times and the people Addie and Bea encountered.