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Across A Starlit Sky
Posted by Literary Titan

Across A Starlit Sky by Susan Shalev is a WWII historical novel that follows Mirjam Coelho, a young pianist in Amsterdam whose life becomes entwined with the Jewish Meijer family as Europe moves toward catastrophe. The story also reaches back to seventeenth-century Portugal through Amelia, a converso woman living under the shadow of the Inquisition, so the book becomes more than a wartime survival story. It is about hidden identity, inherited memory, music, faith, family, and the long echo of persecution across generations.
Shalev clearly enjoys building rooms, streets, cafés, synagogues, riverbanks, and train stations with patient detail. Sometimes I felt the descriptions slowed the pace, especially early on, but they also gave the novel its texture. Amsterdam feels lived in before it becomes endangered, which matters. The warmth of music lessons, the smell of cafés, the shine of a piano, the ordinary pleasure of a young woman beginning work, all of that makes the later threat feel more personal. The war doesn’t arrive in an abstract way. It presses into an already full life.
I also found the double timeline a thoughtful choice. At first, I wondered whether the Portugal sections would pull me too far away from Mirjam’s story, but they ended up deepening the book’s central idea: that history does not vanish just because people are forced to hide it. The connection between Jewish persecution during the Inquisition and Nazi Europe could have felt heavy-handed, but Shalev mostly lets the parallels build through objects, family stories, and emotional discovery. The novel is candid about fear and loss, but it is also interested in tenderness, rescue, and the stubborn human need to belong. It’s not a spare book. It leans into feeling. For me, the emotional openness gave the story its heart.
I would recommend Across A Starlit Sky to readers who enjoy historical fiction with strong family themes, Jewish history, dual timelines, and a clear emotional arc. It will especially appeal to people who like WWII novels that widen the lens beyond the battlefield and look at identity, ancestry, and survival across centuries. It’s reflective, accessible, and sincere, the kind of book I would hand to a friend who wants a moving historical novel with both sorrow and light.
Pages: 288 | ASIN : B0GNS6Q76T
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: 20th Century Historical Romance, Across A Starlit Sky, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, European historical fiction, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, historical romance, history of Europe, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Susan Shalev, writer, writing
Welcome to the Madhouse
Posted by Literary Titan

Stories about grand houses with lots of servants are a staple in historical fiction. A lot of the time, the house and servants are a backdrop for the story. Author Valerie Anne Hudson’s Maids of Maddington: Welcome To The Madhouse is a twist on that kind of story. Yes, it takes place in the home of a fabulously wealthy family. However, the story is very light on the “upstairs” part of the drama. Instead of focusing on fashionable upstairs intrigue, this story is told entirely by a housemaid.
Our narrator, Eliza, is a young woman who comes from grinding poverty. She works as a servant in the homes of wealthier people as a means to support herself, her mother, and her siblings. She is good-natured and dutiful. Eliza has no flaws to speak of. The story kicks off when Eliza starts working in the eponymous Madhouse’s Montague household. She finds a true friend, only to nearly lose her in a classic morality tale.
On the first page, the reader is immediately flung, in medias res, into the hubbub surrounding a high-profile murder trial. But, while a crime was committed, there is a long buildup. Hudson takes readers on that journey, seen through Eliza’s eyes, which builds the suspense. Eliza’s character is one that you grow fond of as she is courageous and kind, and you follow her on her journey as she struggles to take care of her family. Eliza and Annie form a beautiful relationship, and the drama that surrounds them makes this one read that is hard to put down.
Welcome To The Madhouse is an entertaining and engrossing story. The reader gets to see the ugly side of life in the Victorian era is at the heart of the tale, and Hudson effectively uses the contrast between the elegant lives of the Montagues and the difficult lives of Eliza’s family. This cozy little story is definitely worth reading, and I look forward to reading more books in the series.
Pages: 195 | ASIN : B09ZK9RB7P
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, British and Irish, ebook, European historical fiction, goodreads, historical romance, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Pregnancy social and family issues, read, reader, reading, story, teen, Valerie Anne Hudson, Welcome to the Madhouse, writer, writing, YA Fiction, young adult





