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Print Copy of FALL OF POPPIES
Fall of Poppies
Stories of Love and the Great War
Contributions by:
Hazel Gaynor, Beatriz Williams, Jennifer Robson,
Jessica Brockmole, Kate Kerrigan, Evangeline Holland,
Lauren Willig, Marci Jefferson, edited by Heather Webb
Releasing March 1st, 2016
William Morrow
Top
voices in historical fiction deliver an intensely moving collection of short
stories about loss, longing, and hope in the aftermath of World War I—featuring
bestselling authors such as Hazel Gaynor, Jennifer Robson, Beatriz Williams,
and Lauren Willig and edited by Heather Webb.
A squadron commander searches for
meaning in the tattered photo of a girl he’s never met…
A Belgian rebel hides from the
world, only to find herself nursing the enemy…
A young airman marries a stranger to
save her honor—and prays to survive long enough to love her…The peace treaty
signed on November 11, 1918, may herald the end of the Great War but for its
survivors, the smoke is only beginning to clear. Picking up the pieces of
shattered lives will take courage, resilience, and trust.
Within crumbled city walls and
scarred souls, war’s echoes linger. But when the fighting ceases, renewal
begins…and hope takes root in a fall of poppies.
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From “Something Worth Landing For” by
Jessica Brockmole
I first
met her, crying, outside of the medical department at Romorantin.
She’d
been there, hunched on the bench in the hall, when I arrived for my appointment
and was still there when I stepped from the doctor’s office. She wore the same
bland coveralls and white armband as the other women who worked in the Assembly
Building and I might have walked straight past. I always managed to make a fool
of myself in front of women— on one memorable evening with an untied shoe and a
bowl of chowder— and was sure today
would be no different. After all, I’d just been standing stark naked in front
of another man and was still a little red in the face.
But she
chose that exact moment to blow her nose, with such an unladylike trumpet that
I couldn’t help but turn and stare.
I’d never
heard such an unabashed sound from a woman. She didn’t even seem to care that
she sounded like an elephant. She just kept her head down and her face buried
in an excessively crumpled handkerchief.
She looked
as healthy as a horse to be sitting outside the medical department. Not as
scrawny as the other French girls around here. She had dark hair parted on the
side and pinned up in waves, but her neck was flushed pink. I wondered what
kind of bug she’d caught to leave her so stuffy.
“Hello.
Are you waiting for the doc?” I asked. The army doc wasn’t much— despite the
file in his hand, he’d insisted on calling me “Weaselly” instead of the
“Wesley” on my paperwork— but he could
probably give her some silver salts or, at the very least, a replacement
handkerchief.
She lifted her head and blinked red,
wet eyes. I could have smacked myself. I was a dope. She wasn’t sick. She was
miserable and sobbing and I had no idea what to do.
If I’d
had a sister or a girlfriend or a mother with a heart made out of something
softer than granite, I might have known how to handle a teary woman. I’d never
gotten as far as breaking a girl’s heart.
Regardless,
a clean handkerchief would be a start, and I dug in my pockets until I found a
slightly wrinkled one. I held it out, but between two fingers, like feeding a
squirrel.
She
looked surprised at my offer, though I wasn’t sure why. A nice- looking girl
like that, surely she was used to kindness. She stared at me, then the square of
cotton, then me again, considering.
I thought
to add a few words of eloquence to my offer.
“Go on,” I said instead. “I have
dozens.” It wasn’t Shakespeare, but it must have been enough.
She
swallowed and took it with a watery “Merci.”
That
probably wasn’t enough. Chaplains and grandmothers always had a reassuring word
or two. I wondered if I should take a cue from the padre and go with a pious Trust in Godor an old-fashioned There, there. I realized, belatedly,
that I knew how to say neither in French.
She saved me from having to make a
decision. “I am fine, really,” she said in quite excellent English. Tears
welled up fresh in her blue eyes, but she nodded, almost too vigorously.
“Yes,
never better.” She crushed the handkerchief to her eyes.
I didn’t
believe her. People who were fine didn’t
cry uncontrollably in the hallway. “Bad diagnosis?” She looked healthy enough,
with those pink cheeks and bright eyes, but I was no expert. Maybe she had just
found out she had a week to live.
She blew
her nose again, thunderously. “Bad, good, maybe both.”
This was
mystifying, but I suppose that was the way of women.
Jessica Brockmole is the author of the internationally bestselling Letters
from Skye, an epistolary love story spanning an ocean and two wars. Named
one of Publisher’s Weekly’s Best Books of 2013, Letters
From Skye has been published in seventeen countries.
Hazel Gaynor is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling
author of The Girl Who Came Home and A Memory of
Violets. She writes regularly for the national press, magazines and
websites in Ireland and the UK.
Evangeline Holland is the founder and editor of
Edwardian Promenade, the number one blog for lovers of World War I, the Gilded
Age, and Belle Époque France with nearly forty thousand unique viewers a month.
In addition, she blogs at Modern Belles of History. Her fiction includes An
Ideal Duchess and its sequel, crafted in the tradition of Edith
Warton.
Marci Jefferson is the author of Girl on the Golden Coin: A Novel of
Frances Stuart, which Publisher’s Weekly called
“intoxicating.” Her second novel, The Enchantress of Paris, will
release in Spring 2015 from Thomas Dunne Books.
Kate Kerrigan is the New York Times bestselling author of The
Ellis Island trilogy. In addition she has written for the Irish Tatler,
a Dublin-based newspaper, as well as The Irish Mail and a RTE
radio show, Sunday Miscellany.
Jennifer Robson is the USA Today and international bestselling
author of Somewhere in France and After the War is Over. She holds
a doctorate in Modern History from the University of Oxford, where she was a
Commonwealth Scholar and SSHRC Doctoral Fellow. Jennifer lives in Toronto with
her husband and young children.
Heather Webb is an author, freelance editor, and blogger at award-winning
writing sites WriterUnboxed.com and RomanceUniversity.org. Heather is a member of
the Historical Novel Society and the Women’s Fiction Writers Association, and
she may also be found teaching craft-based courses at a local college
Beatriz Williams is the New York Times, USA Today, and
international bestselling author of The Secret Life of Violet
Grant and A Hundred Summers. A graduate of Stanford
University with an MBA from Columbia, Beatriz spent several years in New York
and London hiding her early attempts at fiction, first on company laptops as a
corporate and communications strategy consultant, and then as an at-home
producer of small persons. She now lives with her husband and four children
near the Connecticut shore, where she divides her time between writing and
laundry. William Morrow will publish her forthcoming hardcover, A
Certain Age, in the summer of 2016.
Lauren Willig is the New York Times bestselling author of
eleven works of historical fiction. Her books have been translated into over a
dozen languages, awarded the RITA, Booksellers Best and Golden Leaf awards, and
chosen for the American Library Association’s annual list of the best genre
fiction. She lives in New York City, where she now writes full time.
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