I may have gone a little off-piste from the sequels and series challenge with The Dynamite Room, by Jason Hewitt, but I am glad I did. This is a gripping book set during World War II. Full of drama, it is also a little disturbing at times. Lydia is eleven, and has found her way back to her Suffolk home after running away from the house she was evacuated to in Wales. But instead of finding her mother there, the house is boarded up and appears to be empty. Then, a man appears wielding a gun, and he turns out to be a German soldier - Heiden. He tells her that the invasion has started and that she must stay with him and do as she says or she will be shot! Terrified and then curious, Lydia cannot help but be fascinated by Heiden who reminds her of her father in many ways, particularly when he dresses in his clothes. And why does Heiden seem to know so much about her family and her house? Over the course of the next five days, captor and captive start to build an unusual relationship, slowly adapting to each others presence, and also finding crumbs of comfort within this strange circumstance. Each flashes back in time to the months leading up to and during the first stages of the war, and we start to understand how each ended up where they are and why they slowly become dependent upon each other. There are heart breaking moments as Heiden thinks about the love of his life and Lydia longs for her father and brother, both of whom went off to war. The writing is tight and does not hold back on the desperate and futile situations that feature during any war. You cannot help but root for both the central characters even though they are both deeply flawed in their own individual ways. Jason Hewitt brings real humanity to this tragic tale. I would have no problem recommending this book, though I must warn you that it is not a comfortable read by any stretch of the imagination.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 400 print pages.
Price I paid: £3.23.
Formats available: Print; unabridged audio download; ebook.
No comments:
Post a Comment