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Keep Smiling Through
Keep Smiling Through
Oct 22, 2024 6:33 AM

Author:Ellie Dean

Keep Smiling Through

THE THIRD CLIFFEHAVEN NOVEL BY SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR ELLIE DEAN

June 1940. Rita Smithswore she would never lose heart . . .

Despite losing her mother at a young age and her father away on important war work, seventeen-year-old Rita Smith has plenty of people to turn to in the close-knit community of Cliffhaven. Until Italy sides with Germany and Rita's closest friends and neighbours are interned as enemies of the state.

As war rages across Europe, Rita is more determined than ever to do her bit for the war effort. Although she is forced to give up her dream of joining the WAAF, she volunteers as a fire warden. When her own home is destroyed Rita vows she will not lose spirit and throws herself into doing her bit for king and country, longing for the day when she is reunited with those she loves best...

A fabulous, heart-warming Second World War novel in Ellie Dean's bestselling Cliffehaven series (previously called the Beach View Boarding House series).

Reviews

THE THIRD CLIFFEHAVEN NOVEL BY SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR ELLIE DEAN

June 1940. Rita Smith swore she would never lose heart . . . Despite losing her mother at a young age and her father away on important war work, seventeen-year-old Rita Smith has plenty of people to turn to in the close-knit community of Cliffehaven.

—— from the publisher's description

A touching novel...reminiscent of Call The Midwife

—— Star Magazine

Excellent characters...absorbing story...I look forward to the next instalment in the lives of these interesting women.

—— Bookersatz

Fans of Call the Midwife will enjoy this

—— Woman's Own

With some nice romantic elements and sub-plots that are ripe for development in future, this is a great start to a new series of books and I’m already looking forward to The Nightingale Sisters
4/5

—— One More Page Blog


'A delightfully fresh and original novel with an unexpected sinister streak.'

—— Maureen Lee, winner of the RNA 2000 Romantic No


'This warm first novel set in working-class Soho in the Fifties explores an adult world through a child's eyes ... The author spent her childhood in Soho which perhaps explains the convincing period detail.'

—— Daily Mail

Anshaw's understated, casual tone is made delightful with small details.Vivid images hit home with finishing flourishes . . . Carry The One is an engaging narrative, eloquently told

—— FT

Carol Anshaw is one of those authors who should be a household name . . . [a] fine, eloquent novel

—— USA Today

Superb . . . [Anshaw] has a knack for capturing a personality in a single phrase

—— Financial Times

Moving and engaging . . . Anshaw has written not only a funny, smart and closely observed story, but also one that explores the way tragedy can follow hard on celebration, binding people together even more lastingly than passion.

—— Sylvia Brownrigg , The New York Times Book Review

Words used to praise Anshaw's earlier novels - witty, warm, intimate, poignant - apply equally well to her most compelling book yet, a wholly seductive tale of siblings, addiction, conviction, and genius . . . Masterful in her authenticity, quicksilver dialogue, wise humour, and receptivity to mystery, Anshaw has created a deft and transfixing novel of fallibility and quiet glory

—— Booklist

A brilliant feat of storytelling . . . one of the most intensely vibrant novels I've ever read

—— Boston Globe

Funny, touching, knowing . . . a quiet, lovely, genuine accomplishment

—— Publishers Weekly

Splendid . . . sits somewhere between a Jonathan Franzen novel and a collection of haiku

—— Entertainment Weekly

Anshaw is that rare, brilliant, witty writer whose prose is rich and buttery, and whose plotting is as well-conceived and seamlessly executed as that of the most intricate thriller

—— Chicago Tribune

If you love Jonathan Franzen, you'll love this compelling book

—— Entertainment Weekly

Graceful and compassionate . . . Writing with rueful wit and a subtle understanding of the currents and passions that rule us, Anshaw demonstrates that struggling to do one's best, whatever the circumstances, makes for a life of consequence

—— People

A fine novel . . . stunning . . . wise

—— TLS

Anshaw submerges the reader in gorgeous detail

—— Independent

Carol Anshaw's writing is cool and funny, outraged and sympathetic by turns. The book is full of sharp observations and memorable phrases

—— Literary Review

Beautiful prose

—— Independent on Sunday

A series of beautifully detailed snapshots . . . an arresting examination of three intersecting lives, forcefully told

—— Telegraph
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