In Nazi-occupied Guernsey, the wrong decision can destroy a life. Left profoundly deaf after an accident, Émile is no stranger to isolation – or heartbreak. Now, as Nazi planes loom over Guernsey, he senses life is about to change forever. Trapped in a tense, fearful marriage, Isabelle doesn’t know what has become of Émile and […]
RMS Queen Mary, the great transatlantic liner
While researching transatlantic liners for her new murder mystery, Louise Hare discovered the “perfect ship” already existed: the glamorous, luxurious RMS Queen Mary, launched at the perfect time: the turbulent late 1930s. She tells Historia about what was once the greatest cruise ship of all. When I originally set out to write Miss Aldridge Regrets, […]
The Chosen by Elizabeth Lowry
One Wednesday morning in November, 1912, the ageing Thomas Hardy, entombed by paper and books and increasingly estranged from his wife Emma, finds her dying in her bedroom. Between his speaking to her and taking her in his arms, she has gone. The day before, he and Emma had exchanged bitter words, leading Hardy to […]
Reconstructing Emma Hardy’s secret diaries
The Chosen is Elizabeth Lowry’s new novel about the days immediately following the death of Thomas Hardy’s first wife, Emma, in November, 1912, and of Hardy’s writing of Tess of the d’Urbervilles some 20 years earlier. It’s also the story of how some of the greatest love poems in English, Hardy’s Poems of 1912–13, came […]
Honouring Adele, Egon Schiele’s muse
When Sophie Haydock was researching her debut novel, The Flames, she was surprised to discover the burial place of one of the subjects of her book, unmarked and unremembered. This is the story of how she became determined to make sure Adele Harms’s life, and name, would be recognised and honoured. I walked past grand […]
The Flames by Sophie Haydock
This is the story of four muses. Women whose bodies were shown in intimate detail, depicted by the charming yet controversial artist Egon Schiele. But who were they? Adele: his passionate and fierce admirer.Gertrude: his spirited and possessive sister.Vally: his independent and proud model.Edith: Adele’s quiet and conventional sister. Or was she? The Flames reimagines […]
Scandal at Dolphin Square: A Notorious History by Daniel Smith and Simon Danczuk
Designed as a city dwelling for the modern age, Dolphin Square opened in London’s Pimlico in 1936. Boasting 1,250 high-tech flats, a swimming pool, restaurant, gardens and shopping arcade, the complex quickly attracted a long list of the affluent and influential. But behind its veneer of respectability, the Square has become one of the country’s […]
The Little Wartime Library by Kate Thompson
London, 1944. Clara Button is no ordinary librarian. While the world remains at war, in East London Clara has created the country’s only underground library, built over the tracks in the disused Bethnal Green tube station. Down here a secret community thrives: with thousands of bunk beds, a nursery, a café and a theatre offering […]








