Thursday, 15 October 2015

My Dear, I Wanted To Tell You - More WWI drama!

It is a bit unfortunate that I had started to read this book at the same time as Toby's Room, because not only is this set during World War I, but it also features artists, a facial injury and even two of the same characters!!! However, this did not deter me from continuing with My Dear, I Wanted To Tell You, by Louisa Young ... Riley Purefoy comes from humble beginnings, yet finds his way into the rarefied life of artists by first becoming a model in his youth and gradually making himself indispensable to this artist and finally becoming his pupil. Also being tutored is the very well-to-do Nadine Waveney. They become firm friends and that friendship turns to love, but with the class divide between them, Riley never vocalises his feelings. The war starts and Riley joins up, and finds that he is a remarkably good soldier and works his way up the ranks under the guidance of Peter Locke, his commanding officer. One time on leave, Riley and Nadine meet up and their love can no longer be hidden. Meanwhile, Peter is slowly falling apart, as is his wife, Julia, who is desperately trying to hang onto her beauty, convinced that unless she does so, Peter will never want her when he returns from the war. When Riley receives a terrible facial injury, he is shipped home and decides that he will not be a burden to Nadine, and ends their relationship with a cruel letter. Distraught, she heads to France as a nurse, and experiences the horrors Riley had been protecting her from. Will the war ever end, and can there ever be a happy ending after the inhumanity it has wrought ... This book is a love story, but also encapsulates the ceaseless determination of the human spirit to triumph over adversity despite all attempts to grind it into submission. The dreamy idyll of life before the war is juxtaposed by the senseless destruction of human life in the trenches. It's the story of those who are left at home as much as those who go to war, with each fighting their own personal battles. There is much to recommend in this story, though the ending will not be to everyone's taste. I read the audio edition, narrated by Dan Stevens (pre Downton Abbey fame), and he does an excellent job in conveying all the characters. Worth a punt!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 33 print pages.
Price I paid: Free, it was a gift.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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