Wickwythe Hall

2017 INDIES Winner
Honorable Mention, War & Military (Adult Fiction)

Little’s riveting, enlightening historical fiction puts a human face on the costs of war.

Judithe Little’s Wickwythe Hall is a riveting and enlightening mix of history and fiction that puts a human face on the costs of war.

Set in England against the backdrop of World War II, the lives of three characters intersect during a weekend at a country estate where Prime Minister Winston Churchill is also a guest.

One moment, twenty-two-year-old Annelle is having a dress fitted; the next, she is on the run as the Germans march through her native France. Forced to flee, she eventually reaches England as part of the Dunkirk evacuation.

It’s there that the American-born Lady Mabry, giving care and comfort to British soldiers while dealing with her own tragedy, takes her in. Reid, a confidante to both Churchill and President Franklin Roosevelt, serves as a secret liaison between the two men.

The main story, in which Britain waits, tense and helpless, for Germany’s attack, unfolds at a brisk pace, with many flashbacks successfully fleshing out the characters’ individual histories. An in-depth view of Churchill’s unique personality is a plus.

Through a very authentic device that accentuates her heritage, Annelle’s inner and spoken dialogue is interspersed with French phrases as she deals with her PTSD. Mabry’s voice and independent manner are very distinct. Her profoundly American trait of confident bluntness is apparent when she first sees her future husband, Tony: “They didn’t grow people like him in Virginia.” Reid, a moral and honorable man caught in an extremely tenuous situation, yearns to slip back to a more pleasant past.

The harsh reality and sad inevitability of war is ever present—the women shoppers “carried gas masks along with their shopping baskets.” The evacuation of children from London to the countryside also affects Wickwythe Hall and its guests, while the British bombing of its one-time ally, France, is a climactic event.

Inspired by true events, Wickwythe Hall is engaging historical fiction depicting people caught up in situations beyond their control.

Reviewed by Robin Farrell Edmunds

Disclosure: This article is not an endorsement, but a review. The publisher of this book provided free copies of the book to have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. No fee was paid by the publisher for this review. Foreword Reviews only recommends books that we love. Foreword Magazine, Inc. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.

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