Being quite easily distracted and up for a challenge, I began joining in with Doubleday's #bookadayuk campaign in June and July this year. Each day had a book-related theme to post about and it was great fun trying to come up with an idea for each topic and seeing what other titles people recommended. A few books on my reading list were mentioned, so that was reassuring!
Anyway, I'd been tweeting away quite happily, coming up with books with blue covers, exotic story settings and childhood favourites, when I got a message saying I'd won the publisher's prize draw. I hadn't even realised it was a competition, so it was a nice surprise to be sent a copy of 'Wake' by Anna Hope.
'Wake' by Anna Hope (Doubleday, 2014) |
I was absolutely delighted to receive this book because, due to this year's centenary of the start of the war, I'd been looking for something to read set in this period. I went on a bit of emotional rollercoaster with 'Wake', however, and not just because of the emotive plot.
I love history and didn't realise how much I already knew about the era, so by the middle of the book I was beginning to feel a exasperated because I didn't feel like I was learning anything new. But I soon realised that I'd quite spectacularly missed the point. This book's great strength is the way it brings the dry facts to life through characters that readers, particularly female ones, can relate to. Although I knew more than I'd expected about everything from trench warfare to shell shock to the flu epidemic to women working in factories, it was like I just had pieces of a puzzle. This book made me put them together and think about World War One and its aftermath in a very different way.
Several other people have said on Twitter that they loved this book and I can see why. Ms Hope does a wonderful job of making the characters feel real and it's easy to develop great affection for them. Although they are from another time, the era of our great-grandparents and great-great-grandparents, Ada, Evelyn and Hettie are going through emotional experiences that we can understand and relate to in the modern era. The joy of love and the pain of loss and broken hearts is the same for us all, no matter the year.
Structuring the story around the arrival of the Unknown Warrior was an excellent idea which I think worked extremely well. Again, while readers may know the facts, that many bodies were never retrieved and identified, which prevented many families from burying their dead, the book reminds us of the thousands of individuals who gained closure by believing that the Unknown Warrior was their husband, son, brother or lover.
In some ways, the media's current obsession with World War One and the annual acts of remembrance have simultaneously reminded us of and fossilised this terrible event, often making it feel as cold, formal and remote as a memorial statue on a pedestal. As such, I think this book is a must read for any young woman who finds history dry and distant and wants to understand what World War One really meant to people like her. 'Wake' lives up to its name, helping our ancestors live again and reawakening our understanding of them.
Now, what next..?