Showing posts with label Walking Wounded. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walking Wounded. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 February 2017

Walking Wounded by Anna Franklin Osborne - Blog Tour Review


I am extremely happy today to bring my review of Walking Wounded by Anna Franklin Osborne as part of the blog tour. 

Walking Wounded

Born at the end of the First World War, a young girl struggles to find her own identity in her big family and is pushed into a stormy marriage through a terrible misunderstanding from which her pride refuses to let her back down. As her own personal world begins to crumble, the foundation of the world around her is shaken as Germany once again declares war and her brothers and young husband sign up with the first wave of volunteers. 
Walking Wounded tells the story of those left behind in a Blitz-ravaged London, and of the web of loyalty, guilt and duty that shapes the decisions of the women awaiting the return of their men-folk as the war draws to a close. 
Spanning the period from the Armistice of the First World War to the exodus of the Ten Pound Poms to Australia in the 1950s, Walking Wounded is a family saga whose internal violence is mirrored by the world stage upon which it is set. 

My Review

I honestly can't remember the last time a book touched me quite as much as Walking Wounded. This book is beautiful, heartbreaking and real. 

Walking Wounded is beautifully written, the story is woven in such a way that keeps you fully immersed in the characters lives and you don't want to put the book down and leave them. You need to know what happened next. 

The characters are all extremely realistic and I fell in love with each and everyone of them....well except one of course, one I was horrified by and I found myself wishing that they would leave or would be prevented some way from returning. I think my absolute favourite character was Stanley, he was so strong and gentle and kind, he really brought out the best in poeple. The family setting was so warm and you could feel the love between them all and when one suffered they all suffered and when one was happy, they were all happy, It was a really good representation of what family life was like at the time, with several generations and family members all living together or extremely close by and doing everything together. 

Walking Wounded also shows clearly what life was life at home during the wars. It's not something you ever really think of, I think one of the only other books I've read that have covered anything even close is Goodnight Mr Tom by Michelle Magorian. It was so hard seeing how much people struggled with rationing and sleeping in the bunkers while bombs were dropped above their heads. They also had to deal with "day to day" heartbreak as well as the horror of war. It also showed the strength of people, how they picked up the slack of jobs that needed doing, worked hard and in secret to support the troops and came together to hold each other up. 

I sobbed, I laughed, I loved and I hated throughout this book and I cannot wait for more from Anna Franklin Osborne.

About The Author

Back in December I was lucky enough to have Anna as a guest on my Getting To Know... feature so for more information, please go check that out here

I have always worked in health care, and more recently in education, and like so many other parents, hit a tiny crisis a few years ago when I felt that my purpose in life had narrowed to not an awful lot more than dashing between my two jobs and being a mummy taxi.

I managed to find time to begin singing with a choir, and that helped me feel that I might have a more creative side to myself. One evening, my husband was out and, quite suddenly, I decided to Start Writing. I immediately hit the first obstacles of terrible handwriting and a broken laptop, so my writing career began that night in bed, typing into the note section of my smart phone, with no clear idea of what I wanted to say but resulting in a severe case of RSI and several short stories over the next few nights.

My husband was delighted that I had suddenly found this passion and kept encouraging me to write a novel, which I really felt I did NOT have in me. Later that summer, however, we were walking along a D-Day beach for no other grander reason than our ferry home from France being late, and I began telling our kids about my three great-uncles who were part of that day, and my grandmother who sewed parachutes for the paratroopers jumping over Normandy. Neil looked at me and smiled and said, ‘you do actually have a story there, you know….’

Walking Wounded was written over a period of a year, on a tiny tablet which I bought specifically because it fitted into my handbag – as I said, ‘if it’s not with me at all times, this just won’t happen.’ I wrote every day in 10 minute bursts while I sat in the school car-park waiting for my daughter to emerge from school, I wrote parked outside ballet lessons and maths lessons, I wrote early in the mornings while everyone was asleep.

Walking Wounded is a war story and family saga, focusing on those left behind whilst their men folk went to war, how they survived and how their relationships evolved through periods of violence, loss and reunion. The main story is about May, a young woman struggling to find her own identity as the youngest in a large family, forced into a stormy marriage through a mistake she is too proud to admit, and explores the web of loyalty, guilt and duty that shaped the decisions of the women awaiting the return of their men-folk as WW2 draws to a close. Spanning the period from the Armistice of the Great War to the exodus of the Ten Pound Poms to Australia in the 1950s, its internal violence is mirrored by the world stage upon which it is set.


Don't forget to check out the rest of the tour 





Tuesday, 13 December 2016

Getting To Know... Anna Osborne


Today on Getting To Know... I am welcoming Anna Franklin Osborne, author of Walking Wounded

Your debut novel, Walking Wounded, is set across WWI and WWII, what was the inspiration for using this time period?

I live in the past! I love historical fiction and spend an awful lot of time immersed in it. We were walking on a D-Day beach (simply because our ferry was late) and I began telling our kids about my 3 great-uncles who were there on that day, and about my gran, who stitched parachutes in preparation, then began reflecting on the fact that we all have not-so-distant relatives who were part of this incredible era. I began at the end of the 1st world war because I am interested in how war shapes lives, during and afterwards, as everybody picks up pieces of a life which was thrust upon them, and not necessarily what they had chosen.

When you're writing, do you have a set routine or schedule that you like to follow?

Er - not at all, I'm a working mum! When I realised that I was serious about writing, I bought a little tablet, small enough to fit into my handbag, on the basis that if it wasn't with me at all times, this just wouldn't happen. I typed most of Walking Wounded with this balanced on the steering wheel in my car waiting to pick up my daughter (she is beautifully featured on the cover!) so I suppose you could say I had a routine - 15 minutes every day between 3pm and 3.15! I also wrote in the mornings on holiday on a camping table amongst the pine trees while my family slept on inside our camper- all snatched but precious moments.

You have previously written some short stories, do you have a preference between writing them or a novel?

I love writing short stories and intend to do more - I find they can be such powerful little snapshots leaving a lot to the readers imagination. I never thought I could write a novel but found Walking Wounded unfolded as fast as my fingers could type, and now I must confess I can't wait to get into something bigger again - the beauty of a novel is that you really see it through to its fruition. So no, no preference, I see them as utterly different things - it's like asking me to choose between a Cadbury's Creme Egg and a bacon sandwich...

You are part of a choir, Chicken Soup, have you always been a singer?

No! I always sang in the shower and wished I could try it for real - I wasn't part of a church and the science set at school was never offered a chance to join the choir when I was a kid so never really had the opportunity. I received a flyer in my son's school bag one day, advertising a free, non-denominational choir locally, and decided to Just Do It. I went along, literally shaking with nerves, and LOVED it! I When this little group closed down, I went on to another and then to Chicken Soup (so named because chicken soup is good for you) and have never looked back. I now have lessons too and have done a tiny bit of solo work, which I think has to be the most exposed thing I have ever tried, and I really think being part of this wonderful group of people helped me realise that I had a creative side that needed exploring more. As I'm no artist, I tried writing...

When you're not writing what would we find you doing?

In my dreams or in real life?

In my dreams, sailing. Exploring a different place every day, sitting on deck with a glass of local wine every evening watching the sun go down with my husband at my side...

In real life, I continue to spend an awful lot of time running between my 2 jobs and ferrying the kids to all their clubs! the Mummy Taxi days are not over for some long time to come...

Do you have a favourite character that you have written so far?

No, not really, I loved them all! Possibly Stanley, because both the actual facts and our family folk-lore made him seem such a wonderful figure to me as I grew up that I was excited to imagine who he really was and what he was really like.

You are also a chiropractor, can you tell us anything about that and maybe give some tips to readers for how they should look after their backs?

Don't sit for too long!!!!! We are NOT designed for it - set a timer on your desk so you don't get swept away when you're writing - you should stand up and pace about for a couple of moments every 20 minutes - that's how little time it takes for your discs to start to deform under pressure!! And rescue a dog - 2 walks a day are the best way of staying active and fit for years to come.

Have you always known that you wanted to be an author?

Yes, I think so, but that was after astronaut and ballet dancer so it's lovely that this particular dream came true!

Do you have a favourite author?

No. I love so many different authors and genres. But perhaps, as I have spent so much time curled up in my armchair at sea with Jack Aubrey, I think I might have to choose Patrick O'Brian - the Jane Austen of the High Seas!

What can we look forward to from you next?

I am 'cooking' the idea for another novel now so hopefully I will be ready to start again very soon. I hadn't realised how much time and effort was involved in the aftermath of publication and am currently struggling to find time (again!), but will make it happen soon - my fingers are itching to start...

Thank you so much to Anna for taking time out of promoting Walking Wounded to answer my questions. 

To connect with Anna

Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/GooseWingPublications/?fref=ts
Website - http://www.goosewingpublications.com/


Walking Wounded

Born at the end of the First World War, a young girl struggles to find her own identity in her big family and is pushed into a stormy marriage through a terrible misunderstanding from which her pride refuses to let her back down. As her own personal world begins to crumble, the foundation of the world around her is shaken as Germany once again declares war and her brothers and young husband sign up with the first wave of volunteers. 
Walking Wounded tells the story of those left behind in a Blitz-ravaged London, and of the web of loyalty, guilt and duty that shapes the decisions of the women awaiting the return of their men-folk as the war draws to a close. 
Spanning the period from the Armistice of the First World War to the exodus of the Ten Pound Poms to Australia in the 1950s, Walking Wounded is a family saga whose internal violence is mirrored by the world stage upon which it is set. 

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