Song of Songs
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- $0.99
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- $0.99
Publisher Description
A brilliant, deeply-moving saga of one woman’s search for love and hope in the shadow of the Great War
Lady Helena Girvan was born into privilege: the daughter of a wealthy landowner, she was assured a life of safety and comfort. Until the war descends and ruins everything.
Volunteering as an auxiliary nurse in London’s gritty East End, Helena quickly loses her naivety, and her illusions. But she has something even more terrifying in store – not only the bloody battlefields of France but deep fears about the safety of the men she loves: her friends, her brothers and her husband.
Little does Helena know, however, the war will live on in the form of a man she slowly comes to love with an irresistible sensuality, despite their many differences.
This epic and passionate story speaks for a whole generation and continues to speak vividly to us today. Available digitally for the first time, Song of Songs is a heartbreaking modern classic set in the world of Downton Abbey. Beloved by reading groups and book clubs, and sure to appeal to readers of Diney Costeloe and Gone With The Wind, it is the first of five extraordinary Beverley Hughesdon novels to be released as ebooks.
‘Beautifully written, sensual and sad… Song of Songs moved me to tears’ Woman’s World
‘One of my all time top 10. A sweeping saga that has the power to reduce a reader to tears.’ Claire, Goodreads
‘I loved it. Every page of it. It transports me back into time, I laugh, I cry (lots) and I love the steamy bits. Best romance novel I have ever read.’ Janna, Goodreads
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A bestseller in England, this uneven and somewhat implausible epic portrays the generation of British aristocracy that galloped naively into WW I, only to smash into the horrific reality of modern warfare and endure its aftermath. Helena Girvan, daughter of the Earl of Pickering, showers her childish devotion on twin brothers Eddie and Robbie while distanced from elder siblings Alice and Guy, as well as from her socially prominent parents. With a childhood and adolescence spent mindlessly surrounded by the comforts of wealth, only her brothers' passion to join up prompts sheltered Helena to volunteer for nursing duty, first in an East London hospital and then on the battlefields of France. In highly compelling hospital scenes, disease, mutilation and death--including the loss of her fiance in battle--subject Helena to severe cultural and emotional shock and, mercifully, forge her personality. But when the war ends, our heroine slips back under Mother's domination until stumbling into an abrupt (and unlikely) marriage with the lower-class railman who was the twins' sergeant-major in France. The last third of the novel contains enough sex to make D. H. Lawrence seem quaint, and closes the saga on an improbable note.