Author: Susan Gandar
Another 5 Star Review for ‘We’ve Come to Take You Home’ – by an Amazon Reader
I greatly enjoyed this book . Susan Gandar has a keen ear for dialogue and I detected a refreshing lack of anachronism in the handling of the First World War passages . The two eras of the story are deftly …
Another 5 Star Review for ‘We’ve Come to Take You Home’ – by an Amazon Reader Read more »
Recording of Susan with Neil Francis on Radio Kent
it’s in two parts with a little music in the middle
Intelligent review of #WCTTYH by Sara of Where is My Mind
I was very kindly sent We’ve Come to Take You Home by Susan Gandar to read and review. Samantha Foster and Jessica Brown are destined to meet. But one lives in the 20th century, and the other in the 21st. “April 1916. …
Intelligent review of #WCTTYH by Sara of Where is My Mind Read more »
Review and Thumbs up From Alice Royston-Lee and Friends
Compelling, heart-wrenching and insightful. This book brought to life the hardship of the past but also the confusion of being a teenage girl in the here and now. I found myself transported between two worlds whilst also remaining connected to …
Review and Thumbs up From Alice Royston-Lee and Friends Read more »
Great review by “The Club with No Name” Bookgroup, Brighton
The strong character depiction and interesting parallel storyline between past and future kept us all gripped. We especially enjoyed the really vivid description of the relationship between Jess and Ellie. The story would be a super introduction to life on the home front, during the First World War, particularly …
Great review by “The Club with No Name” Bookgroup, Brighton Read more »
#NetGalley 5 Star – I suppose it becomes bittersweet. I loved this.
I read this novel quite quickly-by that, I mean it took me under three hours. I found that this was a novel suited for a Sunday morning. It made me feel such intense appreciation for what we have today, in …
#NetGalley 5 Star – I suppose it becomes bittersweet. I loved this. Read more »
NetGalley 4 Star – An entertaining and fast paced read, ideal to take to the beach or on the plane
An entertaining and fast paced read, ideal to take to the beach or on the plane. Two girls, Sam in the present day and Jess in 1914 are somehow connected. Sam slips between the two eras – not a new …