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Keep the Home Fires Burning

This series delves into the lives of women in a small English village during challenging wartime years. Follow their strength, resilience, and mutual support as they face personal tragedies, societal shifts, and an uncertain future. Through their stories, discover how community cohesion and female friendship can help overcome even the greatest adversities.

A Woman's War
Keep the Home Fires Burning

Recommended Reading Order

  1. 1

    Join Frances Barden, Sarah Collingborne, Pat Simms, Miriam Brindsley, and the women of the Great Paxford Women's Institute as calamity hits their beloved village and they prove once again that when women work together they can surmount almost any challenge. Frances struggles as her factory is shut down and her husband's secret child arrives at her door. Pat's abusive husband is home from the war. Newlyweds Teresa and Nick hide a secret. Meanwhile, the life of the Campbell family is turned on its head, and Alison finds new purpose in helping the influx of strangers to the village. Through it all the Women's Institute provides support and camaraderie

    Keep the Home Fires Burning
  2. 2

    A Woman's War

    • 416 pages
    • 15 hours of reading
    4.1(83)Add rating

    In the darkest days they'll find their greatest strength . . .As enemy planes continue to bombard the North West of England, the women of Great Paxford fight harder then ever to presevere.Pat thought she'd found true happiness, but as things change at home she finds herself questioning everything she thought she knew about her husband.Laura's young life has been besieged by tragedy, yet a new future looms on the horizon if she can find the courage to reach for it.Teresa has completely reshaped her life to be the perfect wife. Dinner on the table at five o'clock sharpish, each inch of the house spick and span . . . but with the arrival of a new guest, her life is thrown completely off kilter. However, for Steph Farrow it's not the threat of what's to come, it's whether she can live with what she has done . . .

    A Woman's War