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War Brides

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As evacuation gets underway and Britain waits for the Luftwaffe to arrive, the lives of five very different women are about to collide in the sleepy little village of Crowmarsh Priors. Evangeline has eloped from New Orleans with naval captain Richard Fairfax. A Sussex village is about as far away from home as she can possibly imagine, but brings her nearer to her true love - Laurent, who has fled to France. Alice is resigned to life as the parish spinster, but the war will bring her friendships and passion she could never have foreseen. Elsie leaves her East End home at fifteen, to become an under-house maid for Lady Marchmount. She soon catches the eye of another young evacuee - Bernie Carpenter. Tanni has fled from Vienna, and arrives in Crowmarsh Priors with her newborn son, not knowing if her family are alive or if she will ever see them again...Frances is to see out the war with her godmother, Lady Marchmont. She has lived a carefree life of privilege, but now her desire to help her friend, Tanni, leads her into a whole new world of danger and excitement...Together these five women will face hardship, passion and danger. They form a bond that lasts for the rest of their lives and sees them through their darkest hours.

467 pages, Paperback

First published June 28, 2007

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About the author

Helen Bryan

20 books322 followers
Helen Bryan is an American-born writer living in London for many years She qualified and practised as a barrister in England before giving up law to concentrate on a biography of fellow Virginian Martha Washington (MARTHA WASHINGTON FIRST LADY OF LIBERTY published by John Wiley in the USA in 2002 which won an Award of Merit from the Colonial Dames of America. WAR BRIDES (published by Penguin Books in the UK in 2007) is Helen's first novel. It features five young women, the war brides of the title, and is a multilayered saga of watime romances, a daring rescue plot, and long delayed revenge. It is now available on Kindle as well as paperback. A second novel, THE SISTERHOOD, will come out soon. Readers feedback and comments are welcome.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 3,562 reviews
Profile Image for Candace.
1,179 reviews4,957 followers
July 19, 2017
Set in England during WWII, 'War Brides' tells the story of several women, from different walks of life. As London is evacuated, in anticipation of a German invasion, women and children find themselves thrust together in the English countryside, doing their best to make ends meet. This is the story of five such women, who formed an unlikely friendship and found strength in one another despite the dire circumstances.

Evangeline was a young, beautiful American who married an Englishman to escape her own life. She is hoping to find the freedom to live as she wants in another country. Leaving her home without notice created a scandal and it isn't likely that she could return, even if she wanted to.

Alice is the quintessential "good girl". She does everything that is expected of her - charity, social clubs, church activities, providing care for her mother. She's exactly what a well-bred, respectable young lady should be. When her fiancé returns from a short trip to America married to another woman, she is devastated. Everyone is shocked. Despite her humiliation, she picks herself up and trudges on.

Then, there is Frances, the brazen socialite. She yearns for adventure, but her father, the Admiral, wants to keep her sheltered. He wants to see her married and settled down with a family. He does everything within his power to block her attempts to be a more active participant in the war effort.

Tanni has escaped the Germans, moving to England with her new husband, who worked at the university and now works for the English military. With her newborn son, she awaits the arrival of her family, including her younger twin siblings. As more time passes, she grows increasingly worried about their fates.

Elsie is able to escape her life of poverty and find opportunities in the bleakest of times. Unlike the other women that took center stage in this story, Elsie did not come from a life of privilege. Rough around the edges, she is the most "out of place" character in this story for me. At the same time, her practical knowledge and experiences help this group of women make it through this difficult time together.

As a whole, this was a entertaining and eventful story. There was plenty going on, with all of the different characters and POVs. Admittedly, it was difficult for me to follow at first. It took a while to get all of the ladies sorted. However, once I did, it was good.

I found their experiences to be inspiring and mostly admirable. It was a nice read/listen, even if it didn't blow me away. I think I'd heard so much about this book that I expected more.

Maybe it isn't fair, but it is what it is. When I read a book that has been a huge bestseller, over a prolonged period of time, I expect to be amazed. In the end, itwas good, but it wasn't amazing for me.
Profile Image for Nancy Loe.
Author 7 books45 followers
August 4, 2019
In addition to previous reviewer Erin's trifecta of punctuation errors, spelling blunders, and formatting mistakes, I'll add two more:

1) tiresome overuse of dialect – Creole! Georgia! Cockney! Louisiana! - and yet the upper crust Brits, the Jews, and the Austrians had none, and

2) obvious and distracting historical blunders. Frex, the American air crews in Britain were part of the U.S. Army Air Corps and they weren't split off into a separate branch of the service and called the U.S. Air Force until 1947. Glenn Miller's plane that disappeared had a pilot and one other officer on board; no band members were on the flight. These and other errors seem to be pretty fundamental to a knowledge of the period and snapped me right out of the book.

The novel also seemed badly structured. I'd wager most people are reading this because of an interest in wartime Britain, but the beginning of the novel had long, tiresome scenes set in New Orleans that seemed anachronistic to 1939. I thought the author was introducing a grandmother of one of the war brides, because it was all very Mandingo with nothing offered to establish a 1930s time or place. The ending of the book, which I will not spoil, was completely ludicrous and very unlikely with a live tv crew and a big event going on in a small village. The hectic plotting and overabundance of characters also made the novel less believable.

Still, I read the whole thing because there were moments in the book that were well done and made me long for more. There were characters I was interested in and heard too little about: the vicar, the daring debutante, the sad-sack daughter, the twins. But there wasn't enough to call the book successful.

All it really did was make me long for a few episodes of Foyle's War - if you want really well done stories about a wartime British village, that's the ticket.
176 reviews
August 13, 2012
The story started off with a lot of promise but fell flat at some points and the ending was really rushed. The author set you up to care about these 5 girls (although it is clear one of them is missing 50 years later) but each of their stories comes off fragmented and too piecey with too many holes. And the "present day" story got to be annoying and it was overshadowed by the news program and the anchor! Who cared about all that! We wanted to know the story of the women: Alice, Evangeline, Elsie, and Tanni...(and of course Frances).

I had some issues with the girls though: one girl gets married over a weekend? Really? Two all of a sudden falls in love with a husband they hardly knew? Nobody is suspicious of another's frequent trips? I understand we can't get every single detail but giant gaps don't work either.

Some characters were unnecessary: Laurent got way too much time. No need for Agnes. Good thing lady Marchmont and Alice's mom were done away with.

That being said I did like all the girls. Their situations were unique but they came together for a common cause and became friends. I like wartime stories and this one had some good details- I never knew about the billeting or living in the country or the Auxi girls...or even about how there was a British spy working for the Nazis who sent over weather reports for the Blitz.

I wanted to see the end. I was hoping the girls succeeded in their secret mission and they found the spy...by the time I had 150 pages left it was pretty clear who the spy was, I hope that wasn't supposed to be a surprise. The end was too neat and a bit unbelievable, although justice was served.

Profile Image for Sonja Rosa Lisa ♡  .
4,681 reviews621 followers
August 12, 2023
England 1937: In einem kleinen englischen Dorf werden im Zweiten Weltkrieg fünf Frauen aufeinandertreffen: die Pfarrerstochter Alice, Evangeline aus Amerika, das Dienstmädchen Elsie, die selbstbewusste und eigenwillige Frances und Tanni, die Jüdin aus Österreich. Diese fünf sehr unterschiedlichen Frauen freunden sich miteinander an und versuchen, die Schrecken des Weltkrieges zu überstehen und dabei doch auch ihr Glück zu finden.
***
Mein Leseeindruck:
Ich lese Geschichten, die während des Ersten oder Zweiten Weltkrieges spielen, sehr gerne. Ich finde es immer wieder sehr interessant zu lesen, was die Menschen alles aushalten können und wie sie sich mit den unmöglichsten Situationen und Begebenheiten arrangieren. So hat mich auch sofort dieses Buch angesprochen, wo es gleich um fünf verschiedene Frauenschicksale gehen soll.
Leider hat mich dieser Roman aber eher enttäuscht. Die Grundidee finde ich nach wie vor wirklich klasse, und auch diese fünf sehr unterschiedlichen Frauenschicksale sind durchaus spannend. Aber für mich blieben die Protagonistinnen viel zu blass. Es wurde zu emotionslos berichtet. Ich konnte mir von den fünf Frauen kein wirkliches Bild machen. Ich habe nicht mit ihnen mitfühlen können, obwohl doch so viel Potenzial eigentlich dagewesen wäre.
Der Schreibstil war mir zu nüchtern. Ich möchte eine Geschichte nicht nur lesen, ich möchte eintauchen können in die Geschichte, mittendrin sein. Das war mir bei diesem Buch leider nicht möglich.
Das Buch war nicht schlecht; die Handlung war durchaus interessant. Aber man hätte noch um einiges mehr herausholen können aus dieser Geschichte. Für mich ein gutes Durchschnittsbuch, dem es leider an Emotionen gefehlt hat.
Profile Image for Reid.
975 reviews75 followers
October 24, 2012
I find it extremely difficult to write a review of this type of book; there may be nothing more difficult. It is compelling. It covers a fascinating subset of a familiar theme: the blitz and other experiences of war in Great Britain. It focuses on the much-neglected lives of women in those times and what they experienced. And yet....

And yet, it really isn't a very well-written book. Not that Ms. Bryan can't put together one sentence to follow another. Not that she can't build a (mostly) credible storyline. Not that I doubt the veracity of her scholarship (she is, by profession, a historian, after all). But she has drawn from a grab bag of prêt-à-porter characters, no more original or believable than Snidely Whiplash or Dudley Do-Right. There is the standard issue widowed rich lady (nasty, nosy, snide, proud), the dowdy vicar's daughter, the bumbling new vicar, the confused refugee East European, the ne'er-do-well little thief made good by love, the heroic warrior, the spoiled Southern belle...it goes on and on. And what could be better than the ultimate black hat: Nazis! Everyone who sympathizes with the Nazis is, of course, entirely evil and can have no motives other than this evil for their deeds. It wouldn't do to have any moral ambiguity in this fairy tale. And heaven help you if you are not one of the major characters the author has chosen to focus her attentions on; not only will you not be fleshed out, you won't even have a name (watch for the Land Girl's team leader for a good example).

In addition to this, the writing is predictable and plodding. Partly this arises from trying to tell too many stories at the same time without the narrative chops to make each intertwining storyline make consistent sense. I found myself wondering just exactly what was motivating many of these characters to do what they did. I came to suspect that the primary reason they took many of their actions was to satisfy the author's predetermined agenda rather than from any internal logic within the character as written.

I won't even get into the moral blindness Bryan exhibits in the way she chooses to end this story; I wouldn't dream of spoiling that particular nasty surprise for you. I see this as another example of the author having a particular need—in this case to have a "daring" or "shocking" ending—and carrying forward this urge without consulting the characters she has built and asking if they would do what these women do.

But you can see what I mean about reviewing this kind of book. Because in the final analysis I actually liked War Brides. "Compelling" is still the adjective that comes to mind most readily when I think of it. I suppose what I am reacting to is the fact that, for a book I found so basically likeable, I regret it wasn't much better than it was, as it could have been if rewritten by someone who could make the whole thing hang together in a credible way.
Profile Image for Erin (Historical Fiction Reader).
936 reviews723 followers
January 21, 2015
Find this and other reviews at: http://flashlightcommentary.blogspot....

*** NOTE: It has come to my attention that War Brides has been re-edited since the release of this review. I will not be returning to the piece, but encourage readers to understand the issues I noted may not apply to more recent editions of the novel.

Trifecta! Punctuation, spelling and formatting mistakes all in one publication! I’m sorry folks, but I can’t ignore it. Throughout the text I found double periods and significant blunders in both spelling and grammar. Some chapter headings were placed immediately after the last sentence of the preceding chapter and others began a full two pages later. This was not a finished product and I can’t ignore how much these errors impacted my experience with War Brides.

Continuity, or the lack there of, was another issue I noted in Helen Bryan’s work. “Evangeline Fairfax’s coming-out ball was the last party before Lent and everyone knew was going to be splendid.” Evangeline’s last name is Fontaine. I suppose you could make a stretch by saying she eventually marries Richard Fairfax, but as the story is written in the present tense I can’t give much weight to the argument. This book has a very large cast and I’m sorry, but I don’t see how the audience can be expected to keep everyone straight with this kind of execution.

Plot development in the novel was almost nonexistent. Tanni discovers she is pregnant, has a normal pregnancy and holds her son in less than two pages. As a mother, that was difficult to wrap my head around and made it incredibly difficult feel any sort of empathy for her situation. Evangeline drugging Richard was similarly simplistic. One minute she is planning her elopement from New Orleans and the next Richard’s mother is announcing their marriage and arrival in England. What happened to his being in love with and engaged to Alice? Was the drug supposed to be some sort of voodoo meant to make him forget all sense of duty and obligation? I don’t understand.

To be fair, most of the dialogue is fine and I am all for colloquialism in literature, but there’s a line and I feel Bryan crossed it. “’Well, I can’t ‘ardly bear to think of it ‘appenin’ all over again,’ I says to ‘er. ‘It can’t,’ I says to ‘er. ‘But it will,’ she says, certain as anyfink. ‘I fink you can count on it, Mrs Pigeon.’” As a reader, I felt such passages awkward and disruptive to the story at hand. I found them annoying and I’m not sure that’s the impression Bryan was hoping to achieve.

In terms of content, War Brides should have been a home run, but the execution was so unpolished that I found it impossible to appreciate the narrative beneath.
Profile Image for Duane Parker.
828 reviews478 followers
December 20, 2016
Historical fiction novel set in England during World War II. The story of five women, with different backgrounds, finding a common bond by supporting war efforts on the home front. They develop a friendship that will last a lifetime and their individual stories and histories make for a very good read.
Profile Image for Laura.
26 reviews2 followers
January 5, 2013
I waited awhile for the book to get going and once it finally did and I was really hooked in, wanting to read more, the story ubruptly stopped! The characters were finally developed, but then suddenly all forward momentum in the story stopped and things were explained to Alice in a phone call (the death of the elder DeBalfort/burning down of his home and Frances disappearing). Talk about missing out on all the action! It was almost as if the author decided she had written enough and needed to quickly wrap things up.

Fast forward to 1995 when the characters weren't very interesting at all...as a plot device this could have worked so much better than it did. Instead there seemed no connection to the war time characters and the same women in 1995. And honestly, did they really wait 50 years for someone to confront Hugo? Too many loose ends were left dangling...honestly, too many to name here.

Finally, in the edition I read (Kindle) there was a forward from the author in which she wrote that there was not really a De Balfort family that she knew of and that she had based the characters on real accounts of British families being German collaborators. Wow, thanks for letting me know ahead of time that Hugo was the bad guy...that would've been much better info discovered by reading! That statement would've done much better in an afterword. This has to be the first time I've ever seen an author give away plot twists before the book begins.

I did still give the book two stars because I didn't hate it...the characters had really started to be engaging and interesting and I wanted to know more/watch their stories unfold. Unfortunately that was just when the author decided she'd written enough and abruptly stopped the story, which was disappointing to say the least.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Sarah.
45 reviews1 follower
August 10, 2012
I was torn as to whether I should give this 3 or 4 stars. I enjoyed the actual story, but the beginning and end just didn't fit.
The book opens with the main characters all travelling back to England for a VE Day ceremony. But it was just weird. I didn't know who they were, or why they were in these other cities. Similarly, the end is the actual reunification of the women. It was weird and unemotional. I wanted tears, fighting.....something that showed these women went through a war together. One of the central women was not there and they just all seemed so nonchalant about it. Plus, there was an obnoxious reporter who kept stalking everyone, and a revenge plot that just seemed unrealistic and corny. The actual story of the women ended before the war was over, and it was really abrupt. I felt like it could have ended with the ending of the war and given the reader a bit if closure. The reader is left with no idea as to who even survived the war. When the women reunited there were bits and pieces of their lives revealed, but it wasn't enough. I wanted to know how they ended up where they were, how the marriages went...the good stuff. The strongest point of this book was the historical setting. I love historical fiction set in this time period and that part of the book didn't disappoint.
Profile Image for Julia.
3 reviews1 follower
August 19, 2012
Bought this on the cheap for the Kindle, thinking it would be a good vacation read. It wasn't.

Basically, five young women from wildly different backgrounds all wind up in the same English village during WWII. Somehow (and without much explanation) they all become chums, and then there's some romance, a meddling old lady, a bit of espionage, and a failed (but not really!) attempt at saving some twins using mysterious underground smuggling tunnels. The book could have worked, but it just didn't. I blame an inexperienced author and a lousy editor.

The bad:

1) There are too many characters, all of whom were either unnecessary, underdeveloped, or both. A good editor could have saved hours of my life by uninviting these duds from the story. (Seriously. Agnes? Tom? Katie? Evil Nazi Scientist? You're ruining the party.)

2) What was up with the narrative mode of this book? Was it third person limited, omniscient, or both? Why did the perspective switch mid chapter? I get that Frances got a chapter and then Anne got a chapter and so on and so forth, but sometimes a character would swoop in from nowhere and usurp another character's chapter. WTF?

3) Cut out the annoying dialects, please. They are hokey, poorly executed, and, frankly, kind of offensive. I was embarrassed for the author every time Elsie said "fink."

4) Cut out the annoying dialogue, please. Just because you put something in quotation marks and pretend that Evangeline said it doesn't mean that it's not the wolf of insanely boring and unnecessary exposition in a sheep's clothing of "conversation."

5) Something. Was. Wrong. With. The. Pacing. The story starts in 1995, when the main characters have gone their separate ways and then decide to reunite. (Think the intro to "A League of Their Own" with Geena Davis as a grandmother). Then there's a bunch of back story about how the main characters came to live in proximity of each other in an English village. Halfway into the book, there's some character and plot development -- the espionage/ twin smuggling stuff. Then everything abruptly ends and we're back in 1995 and an annoying reporter keeps trying to interrupt the old ladies as they (in a period of a few hours) piece together the mystery of their missing friend and kick an old man to death (it's cool and not at all weird, though, because he was a bad man). And then it ends.

6) I tried really, really hard to suspend my disbelief at the crazy sh*! that went down in this book, but seriously, WTF? I spent half of the book rolling my eyes, and the other half laughing at how absurd everything was.


The good:

1) I probably would have loved this book if I'd read it when I was fourteen. There's some interesting history (though Bryan would benefit from a good fact-checker), strong and likeable (if cliche) female heroines, and, hey, who doesn't love a wartime friendship story?

2) Maybe with the right director, War Brides could be a halfway decent summer movie.

3) It was really cheap on Amazon. Like, a dollar or something.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Gina.
88 reviews2 followers
February 11, 2013
I was really enjoying this book, it felt as though I was spending time with friends.

Why did I rate the book so low then? There were a couple of reasons. First, it felt like there were far to many characters. It felt like there could have been better character development if only there were fewer characters to begin with.
My biggest problem was that the ending felt far to rushed. It was almost as if the author got tired of writing. For the amount of time devoted to the back story, the ending fell flat.
Profile Image for Catherine Crowther.
11 reviews2 followers
December 30, 2012
I honestly thought this was one of the best books I have read ever. Yes I thought that it ended too quickly, but I loved it all the same. (Plus I think I am an idealist and a definate sucker for a happy ending) I liked the way that the beginning set the scene really well and got you intrigued. I felt desperately sorry for Evangeline when she was in New Orleans, but always knew Laurent couldn't be trusted either. I felt so bad for Tanni but would have been happier if her sisters had eventually found their way to her as she probably suffered way more than the others. I actually cried when we found out what happened to her family.
I loved Alice as a character and was happy she got a happy ending at last, expecially after all the misery with her mother. I thought Elsie was great, especially how she matured and altered throughout the course of the book.
I thought that Frances was a brilliant character (probably my favourite)and loved how she developed and changed throughout the book. When she discovered the de Balfort secret, I thought more could have been made of it in terms of detail as I felt her exit was too sudden.(again it was down to me being an idealist rather than any error on Helen Bryan's part - obvious Frances's work in the war meant she could have been called off at any moment)
The sense of loyalty and friendship between all the women was strong and obvious, although I would have loved a good old fashioned argument between Alice and Evangeline.
The ending was great, although I got very upset at what happened as I was such a fan of Frances as a character. Yes, the final scenes were far fetched but they were far kinder than they could have been. Without giving too much away, the person confronted DEFINATELY gets what they deserve. I would have liked more to be made of Frances and Oliver's relationship but that's more because I am just a sucker for an old fashioned romance. I think the relationships and what happened during the story and afterwards to the characters were portrayed realistically as war destroys. I think to tie everything up in a big Disney-fied happy ending would have satisfied me more, but would have left me not feeling the same about the book.
Profile Image for LaNae.
135 reviews
September 27, 2011
The setting (a small English town), the Era (WWII) and 5 women of different backgrounds (and cultures) coming together out of necessity and circumstance sounded like something I would love. And for a while, that was the case. I did like reading about the wartime economies and hardships. Further, I appreciated the strength and ingenuity of each woman to find her own niche in terms of contributing toward the common welfare of the town and/or her friends.

I overlooked some of the grammar and other errors in the text (after all it was a bargain so some of it can expected). However, the way that the book ended completely killed it for me. The vast majority of the book was set in the WWII era. The author utilized flashback (or flash-forward) device and an epilogue to wrap up the loose ends in the book. That in itself wouldn't have been so bad, but it felt rather abrupt. But what really killed it for me was the ending. I found it completely absurd for four elderly ladies to attack an elderly former Nazi collaborator with their canes and entomb him within a hidden compartment in a tombstone, a la The Cask of Amontillado. While it may not be fair, the ending annoyed me so much that it sort of ruined what had come before.

The epilogue probably should have been left out completely. It was such an odd, unrelated and disjointed way to wrap up the mystery of what really happened to Tanni's twin sisters. I would have preferred it to be left out and to be left not knowing for sure. After all, a lot of people were left wondering as to what became of their loved ones during the Holocaust. It seemed too tidy for the author to introduce some random character for a couple of pages to produce some sort of happy ending. Only in many ways it really doesn't feel that way, because Tanni and her friends would likely never know that their efforts were successful. I don't expect happy endings as a matter of course, and in this case, the so-called happy ending weakened the overall story for me.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Farnaz Farid.
347 reviews38 followers
July 19, 2022
خیلی خیلی قشنگ بود . بعد از مدت ها کتابی رو خوندم که دلم رو برد با تک تک شخصیت هاش زندگی کردم
دردهاشون رو حس کردم ،با شادی های کوچیکشون خوشحال شدم با غم هاشون اشک ریختم و ...
۵ دختر جوان که دست سرنوشت از مکان های مختلف دنیا با فرهنگ های متفاوت اونارو توو یه دهکده جمع می کنه
چون جنگ جهانی دومه...
از جنگ متنفرم به نظرم هیچ کودکی نباید طعم جنگ و استرس و ... رو بچشه.
اما دختران جوان داستان ما به معنای واقعی درگیر جنگ شدن و مجبور شدن بزرگ بشن شجاع باشن و هر کاری از دستشون برمی یومد رو انجام بدم .
کتابی بود که دوست نداشتم تموم شه و به نظرم میشد بیشتر ادامه داشته باشه .
پایان بندی شوکه کننده بود
و برای من تلخ

مطمئنم یکی از کتاب هاییه که هیچوقت فراموشش نمی کنم

ترجمه خوب بود
امتیازم بهش ۴/۸ ( اونم فقط به خاطر اینکه می تونست یه کم بیشتر ادامه
داشته باشه )
112 reviews3 followers
July 16, 2014
My problem with this book is that I liked the overall story, but was driven completely nuts by the writing style, character development, and timeline. Regarding writing style, the author tries to recreate a Cockney accent in text, which was completely distracting since I often had to read a sentence three or four times before I could figure out what the character was trying to say. While the story was predominantly written from the point of view of the main five characters, the author would throw in occasional chapters written from the perspective of the vicar or the Cockney mother or the stationmaster, none of whom were important characters. It frequently didn't help develop the story, it just made the large cast of characters even more confusing.

Many of the characters could have used more fleshing out, particularly Tanni, who is hurriedly married to a neighbor boy and shoved on a boat to England in about three minutes. The next time we see her, she's living in England and in love with her husband. How did she end up feeling so loving towards someone who was basically a stranger, when she seemed to be so in love with someone else? No explanation was given.

With respect to the timeline, the first 90% of the novel was fairly slow paced, not much happened. Then all of a sudden, there was a catastrophe that changed everyone's lives, followed by a few pages of Alice's new life, then the novel jumped forward 50 pages. WHAT?!?! We finally got to the interesting part of the novel, and the author skipped it all! Sure, she summed it up in the ending (which is another thing I was disappointed by) but I couldn't believe she skipped what could have been the best parts of the book. It felt like she just got tired of writing all of a sudden, and gave up.

Maybe I'm just a sucker for books about how British women coped during World War II, but I did enjoy the story and the glimpses into ordinary life at that time.
Profile Image for Lynn Young.
30 reviews
March 15, 2013
Warning! If you don't wish to read an insulting review, stop now!
This author is horrible! Author should've clearly done more research. It's obvious that she just plucked ideas and wrote them down. She doesn't know her ass from a hole in the ground! Everything is wrong!
We go from the dumped Alice who never got an explanation from Richard to Evangeline, the supposedly privileged plantation daughter. There was poor and butchered accents and stupid spies. Oh and there was old smuggling caves! Tanni was the poor Jewish gal who was whisked away by Bruno suddenly on moment and the next she was in love and pregnant! I could go on and on but I really detest everything written on Evangeline. Utmost important is to debunk the definition of Creoles. Creoles are people born of French, Spanish, African and sometimes Indian. They are not a mixture of just Caucasian and African. Those people are called Mulatto! I know since I'm from Louisiana. If Evangeline was indeed a plantation daughter, she wouldn't have known diddly shit about hunting, trapping or cooking either. And the voodoo woman. Lets not forget that obvious error. She claimed to have been tortured by having her toes cut off. May I remind everyone that slavery ended in 1865 and this was supposed to be before WWII? Geez!
Don't bother reading this book whatsoever. It's pure crap and not even entertaining crap either.
Profile Image for Regina Chapin.
16 reviews
July 18, 2012
I had such high hopes for this book, but ended up being disappointed. This will contain some spoliers.

So the story begins as the women are coming back together for the first times since the war to celebrate the 50th anniversary of VE-Day. The first and largest section of the book, while interesting to the my inner-history buff was more about the reality of living in rural England during the war, how it effected different types of women (the wild debutante, the poor girl from the wrong side of the tracks, the solid country girl, the american wife, and the immigrant Jew) and how they came together. While laying this ground work, there was no effort to weave in (however seamlessly) the sudden addition of the mystery of Manfred (the spy sending the Germans weather reports to increase the effectiveness of their bombing campaigns. We are beginning to figure out what a German spy has to do with the group of ladies specifically when we come back to the 50th anniversary celebrations only to discover that it is no longer a group of 5 but 4, with one of the women having gone missing before the war ended. And in the space of the afternoon, these 70-80 year old ladies come together and piece the clues together, solving the mystery of both their missing friend (who it turns out was killed in France on the information of Manfred), unmask Manfred (80ish himself) and then beat him in the Parish Church 's grave yard and leave him to die in the smuggler's tunnels hidden by the same grave yard.

The lack of ground work for the ending was quite jarring, but so were the lesser threads on the girl's attempts to rescue the Jewish gals' younger sisters (it comes up at party, they work to rescue them, plan seemingly fails when the Germans bomb the church in order to get rid of Manfred's romantic rival and then it is gone).

If you like novels bring past and present together to unravel a family mystery the novels of Kate Morton (The Forgotten Garden, The House at Riverton) are much better.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Lori Anderson.
Author 1 book109 followers
October 19, 2012
I had to think for a bit about the rating on this one. On the one hand, I had a hard time putting it down. On the other hand, the ending had parts that were completely unrealistic, and one of the themes in the story was a bit hard to digest. HOWEVER -- the characters stayed with me past closing the book, and I was genuinely surprised and delighted with a couple of the endings, even if some would say they were too neatly tied up. I don't care -- I liked it.

The story is about a group of women during WWII in a small town in England. It's about sacrifice and love, bravery and secrets. There's a bunch of back story which has been off-putting to some readers, so you have to be able to mentally jump from here to there and back again. My copy didn't have the spelling and grammatical errors that others found, but there are some historical inaccuracies -- for instance, the Air Force wasn't the Air Force when Bryan says it is (and I say this as a USAF veteran). I can overlook that, though.

However, I have to give the book five stars because it stuck with me and I was sad to see it end, even if the ending was a little sloppy. I actually got into the characters and their lives and maybe it was just the right time for me to read this sort of thing, but I enjoyed it. The best WWII fiction book ever? No. Worth reading? Yes!



Lori Anderson


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Profile Image for Cindy Huff.
Author 10 books52 followers
September 12, 2012
War Brides took me to England during WWII. As an American whose parents were children during WWII I knew of the hardship here and was curious to get another perspective. This book has been well researched. There are five war brides (almost too many characters to keep straight). Evangeline, an American who married an English officer before America joined the war. Frances, a debutant sent to the country to stay out of trouble.Tanni, an Austrian Jew whose arrange marriage happens moments before fleeing to England with her husband. Elsie is a teen from a poor family that along with many women and children from London are relocated for safety. Alice the Vicar's daughter marries an American soldier near the end of the war. Each of these brides has a complex story that is artfully woven into the lives of one another. The historical research shines through as the bond between the women grows in their attempt to help Tanni rescue her 7 year old twin sisters from German occupied France. You feel the deprivation along with the characters as they make due with made over clothes and little food. Even country life in England during this time period was difficult. At just the right moments Helen Bryan places her readers in London to feel the danger and sorrow of the Blitzkrieg. The story begins and ends in 1995 at the 50th Anniversary of VE day when four of the war brides are reunited. A lover of historical fiction it is always fun to experience the lives of those in far away places through the eyes of a well-written book like War Brides. I have deliberately left out details so as not to spoil any of the surprising twists in the plot. There are many of them.
Profile Image for Rebecca Brothers.
156 reviews18 followers
October 3, 2012
Did you know people in the 1940's had illegitimate babies?! Oh MY! (please hear the sarcasm in that. Please). But you know, growing up with respectable (nudge, nudge) grandparents, I didn't realize this happened. Thought teen pregnancy was a new thing, invented by people who wrote scripts for 1980's after school specials with titles like "Did You Hear What Happened to Marti?". But no. And in this wonderful story of sisterhood, friendship, and air raids, you get to hear lots of juicy details about the great sins of our foremothers--and their great heroics as well.

War Brides tells the story of 5 young women coming into their own during the start of WWII. I love WWII stories, all those details of home life, wartime in England; it reminds me of my grandparents telling me their own stories about those times. These girls were my grandparents' age, too, and they are marrying and birthing babies in the midst of bombings and rationing. The distinct voices teeter on the edge of stereotype at times, but oh my goodness-then Bryan gets us so deep into these women's minds and lives that no, they are not stereotypes, they are a diverse group--an American debutante with dirty laundry, a Cockney girl escaping more than bombs, a vicar's daughter who we hope will learn to let her hair down (from her Victory roll hairstyle!), an English debutante with her own bad rap to erase, and a Jewish refugee learning about love in this middle of it all. I loved this story, right up until its strange ending, which I'm conflicted about. Still mulling that part over. But it is, indeed, a GoodRead.
246 reviews20 followers
October 7, 2012
Everybody in my reading circle knows I am drawn to books about the second world war. I REALLY like books that deal with the homefront

in Great Britain. These include The Shell Seekers by Rosamund Pilcher and Forbidden Places by Penny Vincennzi.

So when I saw the delightlful cover of War Brides I just had to read it immediately!

There was a bit of fanciful nonsense in the beginning of this book that made me wonder if it was going to turn out to be some kind of

Danielle Steele,True Blood,Twilight nonsense. I stuck witht the book and it just got better and better.

This is the story of Alice,Elsie,Tanni,Evengeline and Frances. Five young woman from very different backgrounds

who because of the catalyst of the war come together eventually

as friends and help mates.

Having read much about this era I found the historical research to be quite accurate. There are very interesting back

stories about each of these characters.

Many aspects of that war and it's effects on the civilian population are woven into their stories. There is also much sadness

in this book as characters have loved ones go missing and die.

There is an espionage story too that involves a local traitor whose actions cause more heartache.

The book ends with the ladies reunitng at the 50th Anniversary of the war's end in 1995.

They bring about a bit of a wacky close to the above story in my humble opinion and while very satisfying made me have to

"suspend reality" like in the beginning of the book.

All in all of very good read. A step up from cozy chick lit!
Profile Image for Chris.
3 reviews
July 9, 2013
This book was free through the kindle lending library. If it had not been, I would have been quite upset.

It seems as if most people have issues with the non-linear nature of the story. That isn't what ruined it for me. For me, the issue with this book comes after the main conflict has been resolved. The modern-day storyline is poorly constructed and seems to exist as an after thought.

Another slight issue with this novel is the lack of relationship development. These women start off as complete strangers at the start of the book, but are close enough to have a collective mission at the end. For most authors, this is when you would see the characters grow and explore how the women became close. However, this is not the case for "War Brides". In this novel, it seems like the relationships develop more out of convenience than any shared experiences or interests.

The development of the characters is really good, at times. It's just unfortunate that the book can't keep up that development or momentum.
Profile Image for Vanessa.
497 reviews5 followers
March 24, 2014
I read about 70 pages and couldn't take it anymore. I wasn't going to waste my time anymore. It's about 470 pages long. Terrible writing, historical events not accurate and too much jumping around and not explaining details before moving on with story. I do not recommend!
Profile Image for Katherine Coble.
1,356 reviews278 followers
June 18, 2016
I cannot understand why this has a 4.5 star aggregate on Amazon! The writing in the beginning is a series of mean-spirited infodumps, all of them poorly constructed.

Several times I stopped in my tracks, puzzling over a sentence where the writer meant one thing but conveyed another. "They spent hours playing in the garden on sunny days and in the cellar where Richard's father kept the wine when it rained." Me: I've never heard of anyone moving their wine when it rains. That seems odd...oh. Wait.

Each introductory section is told from the POV of one of the group of female leads or those who knew them. But the POV voices don't differ in the least. The old ladies in a nursing home in New Orleans sound exactly like the Jewish woman on a plane from Israel who sounds exactly like the young English vicar's daughter. And they're all catty. The book feels less like a novel and more like a series of gossip tales. Maybe that's why it's so popular? Anyway, it's not my cup of tea and didn't pass my 54 pages test.
Profile Image for Chris D..
101 reviews27 followers
October 10, 2020
Historical fiction about a group of women who live in a small English village during World War II. The title is a bit misleading because some of the women do not marry until near the end of the book and their marriages do not really impact the plot.

I did not really enjoy this book, one of the reasons is that so many of the adventures happen off stage, the text alludes to events that impact the women but does not describe them. Some of the characters were unbelievable and some of the actions did not relate to the period of the book. It was hard to root for many of the women and the villains were certainly made of cardboard. The ending was especially unfortunate and while there were some good moments these were outweighed by so many head scratching plot points and some poor writing.

Not recommended for readers interested in World War II.
Profile Image for Barbara.
333 reviews
March 25, 2019
I was not really planning to like this book. However, once each character was introduced and came together in Crowmarsh Priors during WW ll, I liked the way the story flowed. I actually thought the prologue was a nice seqway into the story of these five women from all different levels of society and numerous countries joining forces in a small English village during the war. Helen Bryan gave the reader a good insight into the lives of those left at home while the men were off fighting. Although the title is “War Brides” the book focus is more friendship and survival skills during such a difficult time. Many reviews I read did not like the book’s ending, I personally did. I felt it brought closure and answered some questions that otherwise might have left the reader hanging.
7 reviews2 followers
August 30, 2012
It wasn't until I was almost 3/4 of the way through that I couldn't put the book down. It was just that after reading so much of the book, I was eager for something...ANYTHING to happen.

For 75% of the book, I was casually reading, finding out about these five, dramatically different women. But like all good stories, they united for a common cause. The thing is about War Brides, is that the common causes were never fully explored, and, quite frankly - lazily explained in the clipped ending.

SPOILER!

Can we please talk about how Frances figures out about Hugo, yet the chapter abruptly ends?! We know there's a possibility she can be sent to France at the drop of a hat, but no real explanation is given? How about Oliver dying of a heart attack - out of shock? Or of heartbreak? We're not really sure, just the drunk at the picnic fills us in that there was a letter and that the 'chap' had a heart issue.

What happened to the twins? The war just ends, the tunnel leads no where...but these women just continue on without exploring other possibilities. In the beginning with Tanni travelling with her grandchildren, it doesn't really seem like she's anxious - more so, just that she doesn't want to revisit the past. And then coincidentally remembering about Rebecca - I'm sorry, but for 50 years this woman has felt that she "was missing information" and it just comes to her out of the blue? Far fetched to say the least.

I also had issues with the epilogue and the possibility of Lily/Klara living on. That is fantastic news - but come on, Helen - please explain! All the family tree business just left me confused!

My chief complaint is that this book didn't go further. I wanted to know more because we forced to be so invested with these women from the beginning. I guess in terms of novels, wanting to know more is better than being verbose
Profile Image for Ann.
345 reviews111 followers
November 30, 2023
What a wonderful surprise this novel was! As is the case with many of my GR friends, I feel as if I have “maxed out” on WWII, but this novel has been sitting on my shelf for years, and I’m so glad I finally read it. It tells the story of five women who, as a result of various life events, wind up as brides in a small English village, where they spend most of WWII. The women come from varied backgrounds: one is from Louisiana and marries a British officer to escape a difficult personal situation; one is a Jewish refugee from Austria, who marries a fellow Austrian with a British residency permit; one is a London debutante, who after “naughty behavior” is forced by her family to live with her aunt in the countryside; one is local pastor’s daughter; and one is from a poverty stricken family in a poverty stricken part of London. The author does a wonderful job of developing completely the unique character of each of these women. Each scene is fully drawn as the reader watches the different women react in their own ways to the challenges, pressures and emotions of war. But we see the women in much more than just a reflection of war. There are illnesses, births, deaths, loves, jealousies, many secrets and all of the emotions, large and small, that make up daily life. This novel does not necessarily make the reader ponder complex issues, but it is a wonderful story told extremely well. I recommend audio on this one, because the different voices of the different women really add to the experience.
Profile Image for Becky.
396 reviews179 followers
June 28, 2012
Pros of this book: interesting reading about World War II, Hitler, Germans, and a glimpse into what it was like for the people who weren't fighting the war, just trying to live through it. Some of the women's romances were lovely, and the descriptions of the outfits, food, houses were wonderful as well.

Cons: it takes a WHILE to get to the actual meat of the story. I get that the author has to explain the back story behind how all these women meet and become friends, but I was struggling to stay interested in the beginning. Not that their individual stories weren't interesting...but the fact that the author started out with a small, present-day blurb about each of the women, then switched to history, then back to present-day - I had a hard time keeping everyone straight. Oliver and Frances were my favorite couple of the group, and I wished there had been more on them.

It ended up being a nice book, although I would have liked for the ending to have been more clear and neat.
Profile Image for Isabel Keats.
Author 51 books541 followers
July 7, 2018
Es un libro muy entretenido. A mí siempre me han gustado mucho los libros que tratan de la vida de los ingleses en la II Guerra Mundial, pero me ha parecido que le ha faltado profundizar en varias de las historias, tengo la sensación de que las cosas ocurren un poco atropelladamente.
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