From the opening scene--the maids, in their thin flannel nightdresses, rising at dawn to prepare the family's morning tea--we are irresistibly drawn into the Cazalets' intimate world.
In 1937, the coming war is only a distant cloud on the horizon. As the various Cazalet households prepare for their summer pilgrimage to the family estate in the Sussex countryside, we meet hearty Edward, in love with but by no means faithful to his good wife, Villy; Hugh, wounded in the Great War, devoted to pregnant Sybil; Rupert, who worships the body if not the mind of his demanding wife, Zoe; and Rachel, the unmarried sister, conducting a desperate clandestine love affair under the family roof.
"Vivid and compulsively readable" (Sunday Telegraph), this is a masterpiece in the tradition of Upstairs, Downstairs and Downton Abbey.
"If you like English novels about wars, or about what people do during the war – it’s not about the fighting, it’s about the people."
Author of the award-winning Bad Hair Day Mysteries and Writing the Cozy Mystery. Blogger, Speaker, Reader.
“Nancy Cohen is a tremendous talent whose novels will remind readers of the Star Wars trilogy.” The Light-Years Series #fantasy #scifiromance https://t.co/iREydlp1Ub https://t.co/I210ebAjBZ
"...5 volumes of sprawling family saga spanning from the 1930s to 1950s. Howard is a sharp observer of human drama and psychology, and she writes about pain, loss and longing superbly well. Somehow - for me - this works like some kind of balm."