In the cold nights of the Blitz, her music warmed their hearts…
Victor Pemberton writes a compelling wartime saga in We’ll Sing at Dawn, the story of a family’s experiences of the London Blitz. Perfect for fans of Dee Williams and Harry Bowling.
‘Captures the wartime spirit down to the last wail of the air raid siren… History with a heart on its sleeve’ – Northern Echo
September 1940, Islington. The Blitz is taking its toll on Beth Shanks and her family. An aerial torpedo has recently devastated a complete block of flats and shops in Seven Sisters Road, and traumatised the whole neighbourhood. Beth works as a munitions worker at a factory in North Finchley and dodges falling shrapnel on her way to work. Her younger brother Phil is a teenage cyclist messenger in the Auxiliary Fire Service and he’s been twice dug out of rubble as he carried important messages. Beth’s father is away fighting and her mother Connie teaches piano lessons to children who’ve escaped evacuation.
Connie despairs that Beth won’t learn how to play the piano properly and will only play popular songs by ear, but when she hears Beth playing the piano to lift the spirits of local people trapped in an air raid, she realises there is much more to music than she ever realised…
What readers are saying about We’ll Sing at Dawn:
‘Victor Pemberton’s books are excellent’
‘Five stars‘
Victor Pemberton writes a compelling wartime saga in We’ll Sing at Dawn, the story of a family’s experiences of the London Blitz. Perfect for fans of Dee Williams and Harry Bowling.
‘Captures the wartime spirit down to the last wail of the air raid siren… History with a heart on its sleeve’ – Northern Echo
September 1940, Islington. The Blitz is taking its toll on Beth Shanks and her family. An aerial torpedo has recently devastated a complete block of flats and shops in Seven Sisters Road, and traumatised the whole neighbourhood. Beth works as a munitions worker at a factory in North Finchley and dodges falling shrapnel on her way to work. Her younger brother Phil is a teenage cyclist messenger in the Auxiliary Fire Service and he’s been twice dug out of rubble as he carried important messages. Beth’s father is away fighting and her mother Connie teaches piano lessons to children who’ve escaped evacuation.
Connie despairs that Beth won’t learn how to play the piano properly and will only play popular songs by ear, but when she hears Beth playing the piano to lift the spirits of local people trapped in an air raid, she realises there is much more to music than she ever realised…
What readers are saying about We’ll Sing at Dawn:
‘Victor Pemberton’s books are excellent’
‘Five stars‘
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Reviews
Praise for Victor Pemberton: Captures the wartime spirit down to the last wail of the air raid siren... History with a heart on its sleeve
Peopled with strong, sincere and appealing characters
A warm, poignant story
[Pemberton] knows how to please his waiting audience
Heart-warming saga of working class life