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Pegasus Road
Posted by Literary Titan

Pegasus Road is a haunting and beautifully written wartime novella that weaves love, loss, and resilience into a deeply human story. It follows Barbara, a young Englishwoman who refuses to accept that her fiancé, Andrew, a British lieutenant missing in action, is gone. Her journey from a quiet Dorset farm to the battered fields of Normandy becomes both a literal and emotional odyssey, one that explores devotion, courage, and the price of hope in a world torn apart by war. The book moves between Barbara’s desperate search and Andrew’s fight for survival, drawing the reader into both the intimacy of their bond and the vast chaos surrounding them.
The writing is cinematic and raw, full of moments that feel suspended between heartbreak and grace. Harry Black doesn’t rush anything; he lets silence do the talking, and that patience gives every scene its weight. What struck me most was how grounded the emotions were. There’s no melodrama, just quiet honesty. The war isn’t romanticized, nor is love painted as invincible; instead, both are messy, uncertain, and painfully real. The pacing slows at times, but I didn’t mind. The pauses felt like breaths between heartbreaks.
What really stayed with me was Barbara herself. She’s not a hero in the conventional sense, yet she embodies courage in its truest form, the kind that comes from stubborn love and relentless faith. Her defiance feels believable, even when it borders on reckless. And Andrew’s perspective balances hers with stoic tenderness, revealing the weariness of a soldier clinging to humanity in inhuman circumstances. The dialogue feels organic. It’s not the kind of book that shouts; it whispers, and somehow that makes it hit harder.
Pegasus Road left me reflective and strangely comforted. It’s a story about finding light in ruins, about ordinary people doing extraordinary things for love. I’d recommend it to anyone who loves historical fiction with heart, especially readers drawn to stories like Atonement or The Nightingale. It’s not just about war or romance; it’s about endurance, about how hope keeps flickering even when everything else burns out.
Pages: 129 | ASIN : B0FNXS83MX
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, Harry Black, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, Pegasus Road, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing




