Monday, 16 January 2023

Book Review: Memories of the Cottage by the Sea by Rebecca Alexander


Charlotte Kingston is at a crossroads in her life. After ending a long-time relationship, she's sent to Morwen Island, a place she hasn't visited since her grandmother's funeral. As a school inspector, she's there to write a report, to see if the small school should be kept open. It's a straightforward job, as the school has two pupils. However, when Charlotte meets the children, and their families and uncovers secrets from her grandmother's past, is closing the school the right decision to make, or is there more than one reason for it to remain open and for her to stay on the island she loves?


Jenofeve "Jenny" Huon lives in Usant at the time the Germans invaded and occupied France. As someone who speaks the native language of Breton, French, as well as English and some Cornish, she is quickly recruited to translate messages for the resistance movement by Laurie Byers. However, as she falls under the radar of Kriminaldireftor Wolfgang Albrecht, she is in danger, as are others on the island…

This is another beautifully written novel by Ms. Alexander with this one triggering so many emotions, as the narrative flows effortlessly between 1940 and the present. In the past, we are confronted with the fear of the unknown versus the anticipation of the unexpected as we hold our breath as Jenny and the Keller family attempt an escape from Ushant under the noses of the German occupiers of the small Breton Island. Equally, the present is emotionally charged, as Charlotte's daily routine becomes more complicated, as her life takes on a new direction.

The author does a tremendous job of building these emotions, keeping the readers’ adrenalin flowing and causing an occasional tear to fall. The result is a stunning blend of the past and the present set against two beautiful backdrops.

This is the second novel in the Cottage by the Sea series and can be read as a stand-alone. As someone who has read The secrets of the Cottage by the Sea, I heartily recommend that one too.

***arc generously received courtesy of Bookouture via NetGalley***


As she inhales the salty sea air, Charlotte glimpses the island on the horizon. Seeing it after all these years still sends a shiver down her spine. Should she be returning to this place?

When teacher Charlotte Kingston is sent to close a school on an isolated Scilly Isle, it is her first time on the island since summer holidays spent there with her grandparents. But with a newly broken heart, she’s desperate to travel as far from her life on the mainland as possible.

Not long after she arrives, two visiting children find themselves in need of a place to stay when their grandmother falls ill. When Charlotte agrees to take care of the boys, she suddenly has a reason to keep the school open a little longer. With a renewed sense of purpose, Charlotte begins to connect with the local islanders who tell her more about her family.

Intrigued, Charlotte decides to decode her grandmother’s old letters from the Second World War. They reveal a story of a forbidden love that defied the darkness of war, and of a beautiful, brave young man who would risk everything for his country, even if meant losing the woman he loved…

Just as Charlotte realises the secret will change her life forever, the children’s handsome, enigmatic stepfather, Ash, arrives to take care of them. But Charlotte doesn’t trust him – he left the boys once before, why wouldn’t he do it again? But as the tension grows between them, Charlotte feels an attraction developing, too. And although she can’t stop thinking about Ash, and his soft, full lips, she’s afraid to open her heart again.

But rereading her grandmother’s story, Charlotte realises there is courage and redemption among the pages. Is this a sign that everyone deserves a second chance, maybe even Ash? And, if she is brave enough to let him in, will she be able to put her fractured heart back together once and for all?



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