The Booklover's Library
By Madeline Martin
On Sale: September 10, 2024
ISBN: 9781335000392
Hanover Square Press Paperback Original
Price: $18.99
Buy Links:
HarperCollins: https://www.harpercollins.com/products/the-booklovers-library-madeline-martin?variant=41311560695842
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1335000399
Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-booklovers-library-madeline-martin/1143849745
BookShop.org: https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-booklover-s-library-original-madeline-martin/20392302
Social Links:
Author Website: https://madelinemartin.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MadelineMartinAuthor
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MadelineMMartin
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/madelinemmartin/
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/12062937.Madeline_Martin
About the Book:
A heartwarming story about a mother and
daughter in wartime England and the power of books that bring
them together, by the bestselling author of The Last Bookshop in
London.
In Nottingham, England, widow Emma Taylor finds herself in desperate need
of a job. She and her beloved daughter Olivia have always managed just fine on
their own, but with the legal restrictions prohibiting widows with children
from most employment opportunities, she’s left with only one option: persuading
the manageress at Boots’ Booklover’s Library to take a chance on her with a
job.
When the threat of war in England becomes a reality, Olivia must be evacuated
to the countryside. In the wake of being separated from her daughter, Emma
seeks solace in the unlikely friendships she forms with her neighbors and
coworkers, and a renewed sense of purpose through the recommendations she
provides to the library’s quirky regulars. But the job doesn’t come without its
difficulties. Books are mysteriously misshelved and disappearing and the work
at the lending library forces her to confront the memories of her late father
and the bookstore they once owned together before a terrible accident.
As the Blitz intensifies in Nottingham and Emma fights to reunite with her
daughter, she must learn to depend on her community and the power of literature
more than ever to find hope in the darkest of times.
About the Author:
Madeline Martin is a New York Times, USA Today, and internationally bestselling author of historical fiction and historical romance with books that have been translated into over twenty-five different languages.
Excerpt:
PROLOGUE
Nottingham, England April 1931
JUST ONE MORE CHAPTER. Emma lingered in the
storage area on the second floor of her father’s bookshop, Tower Bookshop,
with Jane Austen’s Emma cradled in her lap. Sadly, not her namesake—her
parents had named her Emmaline for an aunt she’d never met, who had died on
Emma’s seventh birthday ten years ago.
Still, the book was one of Emma’s
favorites.
“Emma.” Papa’s voice rose from somewhere in
the bookshop, sharp with irritation.
She frowned. Papa was seldom ever cross
with her.
Perhaps the smoke from the man who had come
in with his cigar earlier still lingered in the shop.
She settled a scrap of paper into the spine
of her book.
“Emmaline!” Something to that second cry
snapped her to attention, a raw, frantic pitch.
Papa was never panicked.
She leaped up from the seat with such
haste, the book dropped to the ground with a whump.
“I’m in the warehouse,” she called out,
racing to the door.
The handle was scalding hot. She yelped and
drew back. That’s when she saw the smoke, wisps seeping beneath the door,
glowing in the stream of sunlight.
Fire.
She put her skirt over her hand and twisted
the knob to open the door. Thick plumes of smoke billowed in, black and
choking.
She sucked in a breath of surprise,
unintentionally inhaling a lungful of burning air. A cough racked her and she
stumbled back, her mind reeling as her feet pulled her from the threat.
But to where? This was the only exit from
the storeroom, save the second-floor window.
“Papa,” she shouted, terror creeping into
her voice.
All at once, he was there, wrapping a
blanket around them, the one she kept in the shop for cold mornings before the
furnace managed to heat the old building.
“Stay at my side.” Papa’s voice was
gravelly beneath the blanket where he’d covered the lower part of his face.
Even as he led her away, a great cough shuddered through his lean frame.
Beyond the wall of smoke was a vision
straight out of Milton’s Paradise Lost as fire licked and climbed its
way up the towering stacks of books, devouring a lifetime of careful curation.
Emma screamed, the sound muted by the blanket.
But Papa’s hand was firm at her back,
pressing her forward. “We have to run.” Not slowing, he guided her to the winding
metal staircase. She used to love clattering down it as a girl, hearing the
metal ringing around her.
“It’s hot,” Papa cautioned. “Don’t touch
it.”
Emma hugged against his side as they
squeezed down the narrow steps that barely fit the two of them together. It
swayed beneath their weight, no longer sturdy as it had once been. The blazing
heat felt as though it was blistering Emma’s skin. Too hot. Too close. Too
much.
And they were plunging deeper into the
fiery depths.
The soles of Emma’s shoes stuck to the last
two steps as rubber melted against metal.
What had once been rows of bookshelves was
now a maze of flames. Even Papa hesitated before the seemingly impassable
blaze.
But there was nowhere else to go.
The fire was alive. Cracking and popping
and hissing and roaring, roaring, roaring so loud, it seemed like an
actual beast.
“Go,” he shouted, and his grip tightened
around her, pulling her forward.
Together they ran, between columns of fire
that had once been shelves of books. An ear-shattering crack came from above,
spurring them to the front as fire and sparks poured down behind them.
Emma ran faster than she ever had before,
faster than she knew herself capable. Papa’s arm at her side yanked her this
way or that, navigating through the fiery chaos. Until there was nowhere to
go.
Papa roared louder than the fire beast and
released her, running toward the blazing door. It flew open at the impact, revealing
clean sunny daylight outside. He turned toward her even as she rushed after him
and grabbed her around the shoulders, hauling her into the street.
Emma gulped in the clean air, reveling in
the cool dampness washing into her tortured lungs. A crowd had gathered, staring
up at the Tower Bookshop. Some came to Emma and Papa, asking in a frenzy of
voices if they were hurt.
In the distance came the scream of
emergency sirens. Sirens Emma had heard her entire life, but had never once
needed herself.
There was need now. She held on to Papa’s
hand and looked behind her at the building that had been in her family for two
generations and was meant to become hers someday. Her gaze skimmed over the
bookshop to the top two floors where their home had once been.
The fire beast gave a great heaving howl
and the top floor crumpled.
Someone grabbed her from behind, dragging
her back as the rest of the structure came down, ripping her hand from her father’s.
She didn’t reach for him again, unable to move, unable to think, her eyes fixed
on the building as it crashed in on itself in a fiery heap. Their livelihood.
Their home.
All the pictures of her mother who had died
after Emma was born, all the books she and her father had lovingly selected
from bookshops around England on the trips they’d taken together, everything
they’d ever owned.
Gone.
Emma choked on a sob at the realization.
Everything was gone.
“We need a doctor.” A man’s voice broke
through her horror, pulling her attention to her father.
He lay on the ground, motionless. Soot
streaked his handsome slender face, and his thick gray hair that had once been
the same shade of chestnut as hers was now singed in blackened tufts.
“Papa?” She sagged to the ground beside
him.
His eyes lifted to her, watery blue and
filled with a love that made her heart swell. The breath wheezed from his chest
like a kettle’s cry. “You’re safe.”
Once the words left his mouth, his body
relaxed, going slack.
“Papa?” Emma cried.
This time his eyes did not meet hers. They
looked through her. Sightless and empty.
She shuddered at how unnatural he appeared.
Like her father, and yet not like her father.
“Papa?”
The wailing sirens were still too far-off.
“I’m a doctor.” A man knelt on the other
side of her father. His fingers went to Papa’s blackened neck and the man’s sad
brown eyes turned up to her.
“I’m sorry, love. He’s gone.”
Emma stared at the man, refusing to believe
her ears even as she saw the truth.
It had always just been Emma and her
father, the two of them against the world, as Papa used to say. They read the
same books to discuss together, they worked every day at the bookshop together,
friends and colleagues as much as they were father and daughter. Once Emma had
completed her schooling, she’d even traveled with him, curating books like the
first editions they were still waiting on to arrive from Newcastle.
Now that beautiful light that shone in his
eyes had dulled. Lifeless.
It was no longer Papa and her against the
world.
He was gone.
Their shop was gone.
Their home was gone.
Everything she knew and loved was gone.
Excerpted from THE BOOKLOVER’S LIBRARY
by Madeline Martin, Copyright © 2024 by Madeline Martin. Published by
arrangement with HTP Books, a Division of HarperCollins.
Loved this book!!
ReplyDeleteHere's my review: https://silversolara.blogspot.com/2024/09/the-booklovers-library-by-madeline.html
Hope your week is good.