Thursday, 23 April 2026

Book Review: The Enemy's Wife (Survivors of War Series) by Deborah Swift



The Enemy's Wife
(Survivors of War Series)
By Deborah Swift



Publication Date: April 6th, 2026
Publisher: HQ Digital
Pages: 380
Genre: Historical Fiction


'A fast-paced, beautifully written, and moving story. Refreshing to read a book set in a different theatre of war. Wartime Shanghai jumped off the page'
CLARE FLYNN


A poignant story of the impossible choices we make in the shadow of war, for fans of Daisy Wood and Marius Gabriel.


1941. When Zofia’s beloved husband Haru is conscripted into the Imperial Japanese Army, she is left to navigate Japanese-occupied Shanghai alone.

Far from home and surrounded by a country at war, Zofia finds unexpected comfort in a bond with Hilly, a spirited young refugee escaping Nazi-occupied Austria.


As violence tightens its grip on the city, they seek shelter with Theo, Zofia’s American employer. But with every passing day, the horrors of war and Haru’s absence begin to reshape Zofia’s world – and her heart.


Can she still love someone who has become the enemy?



Readers love The Enemy's Wife:


'A gorgeous novel that will truly pull at your heartstrings'

CARLY SCHABOWSKI


'I loved The Enemy’s Wife – a gripping, fast-paced and evocative story about the Japanese occupation of Shanghai during WW2 – and really rooted for the brave and selfless central character, Zofia. Highly recommended'

ANN BENNETT


'Such an emotional and moving read, grounded in immaculate research that never overshadows the heart of the story'

SUZANNE FORTIN


Book Rating:

📚📚📚📚📚⭐ = A book in a million

📚📚📚📚📚 = I could not put this book down. I Highly Recommend it.

📚📚📚📚 = A really great read.

📚📚📚 = It was enjoyable.

📚📚 = It was okay.

📚 = Um...! 😕


My Review

The Enemy’s Wife

📚📚📚📚📚⭐ = A book in a million

I didn’t expect The Enemy’s Wife to be this emotionally rich. While it begins as a wartime story in Japanese-occupied Shanghai, the novel evolves into an exploration of how war distorts people’s sense of identity, loyalty, and love. It doesn’t follow a neat, linear path, instead reflecting the unpredictable impact conflict has on its characters’ lives.
Zofia is at the centre, though she never feels like a fixed point. When her husband Haru is conscripted into the Imperial Japanese Army, it initially seems like a story about being left behind and trying to survive. But as things unfold, it’s clear her situation runs deeper than that. She’s caught between different worlds—geographically and emotionally—and never fully belongs anywhere. Her connection to Haru is tied to memory, to who he used to be, and that starts to come apart as the war intrudes. Her relationship with Theo develops in a way that feels natural. It’s not about replacing Haru; it grows out of shared vulnerability and circumstance rather than clear choices.
Hilly was the character that surprised me most. She comes in as a lively young refugee, full of energy, but there’s always a sense of what she’s already been through. Her relationship with Zofia becomes one of the most affecting parts of the book—it feels less like friendship and more like a makeshift family. What stands out is how she carries both lightness and something heavier at once, and how quickly that balance can fall apart. Her death, caused by illness rather than direct violence, is especially hard to take. It’s quiet and almost random, which makes it feel even more real.
Haru’s storyline is much more uncomfortable. At first, he’s seen through Zofia’s memories, but as the novel reveals more of his perspective, that image becomes harder to hold on to. His experiences in the army changed him in ways that are difficult to accept. There’s no clear point where he stops being a victim and becomes something else, which makes his arc unsettling. By the end, it feels like he’s aware of what’s been lost, but that doesn’t undo it.
Theo, on the other hand, brings a sense of steadiness. His relationship with Zofia develops quietly, shaped by what they go through together rather than anything explicitly stated. It never turns into something overly simple or defined, which makes it believable. He offers a sense of stability, but even that feels uncertain given everything happening around them.
One of the most striking things about the book is how it shows different kinds of damage. Hilly and Haru almost feel like two sides of the same coin. Hilly is worn down by circumstance—illness, displacement, the slow loss of safety—while Haru is changed from within by the system he’s part of. One is destroyed by the war’s conditions, the other by what the war turns him into. That contrast runs through the whole story.
The pacing matches this approach. It doesn’t rush or try to tie everything up neatly. There are moments of tension, but just as much time is given to quieter scenes that focus on how everything feels rather than just what’s happening.
By the end, it’s not one specific moment that stands out, but the overall weight of it all—Zofia trying to find her place, Hilly’s absence, Haru’s transformation, and the uncertain possibility of something with Theo. The epilogue doesn’t really offer closure so much as a sense that life goes on, even if things can’t be put back the way they were.
Ultimately, The Enemy’s Wife is not a story that wraps things up cleanly, but that ambiguity is precisely its strength. The novel insists that uncertainty, loss, and unresolved tension are part of war’s lasting effect—leaving the reader with the lingering sense that emotional complexity is its main legacy.



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Deborah Swift


Deborah used to be a costume designer for the BBC, before becoming a writer. Now she lives in an old English school house in a village full of 17th Century houses, near the glorious Lake District. Deborah has an award-winning historical fiction blog at her website www.deborahswift.com

Deborah loves to write about how extraordinary events in history have transformed the lives of ordinary people, and how the events of the past can live on in her books and still resonate today.

Her WW2 novel Past Encounters was a BookViral Award winner, and The Poison Keeper was a winner of the Wishing Shelf Book of the Decade.


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Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Book Excerpt: Another Soul Saved by John Anthony Miller

 


Another Soul Saved 
By John Anthony Miller


Publication Date: April 1, 2026
Publisher: Independent
Pages: 415
Genre: Historical Fiction

Vienna, 1941

Monika Graf, the wife of a wealthy Austrian military commander, steals two Jewish girls from the Nazis—a crime often punishable by death. With soldiers in rapid pursuit, a homeless Jew named Janik, a mysterious man who lurks in the shadows, helps her escape.

Unable to have children of her own, she finds a new purpose in life—rescuing Jewish children from the horrendous Nazi regime. She asks the Swiss for help, trading military secrets she gleans from her husband for the lives of Jewish children. With Janik’s continued support, she also enlists Father Christoff, a priest at St. Stephen's Cathedral coping with unexpected emotions and doubting his commitment to God. Monika quickly forms bonds that can’t be broken, feelings exposed she never knew existed. 

Relentlessly pursued by Gestapo Captain Gustav Kramer, Monika combats continuing risk to her clandestine operation. When her husband, a rabid Nazi, returns from the battlefield severely wounded, she gets caught in a cage that she can’t crawl out of.

Wrought with danger, riddled with romance, Another Soul Saved shows humanity at both its best and worst in a classic struggle of good versus evil.

Excerpt

Monika glanced over her shoulder. No one followed. The chaos had helped her—taking the girls had gone unnoticed. A crowd had been gathering in the plaza—those whose curiosity couldn’t be contained—and the throng of people shielded her escape. She hurried down the street, the two Jewish girls beside her, and merged with pedestrians. She tried to blend in with the others should anyone be watching, but knew that she couldn’t. Not with two dark-haired little girls with smudged faces and dirty dresses. 

As they walked down the street, she looked at the girls with a sinking feeling. She had to protect them. She was willing to do it—she would do anything to help innocent children—but it came wrought with danger. She didn’t know what laws she had broken, but she assumed there were many. Now she had to flee. She had no other option. She had to save the girls, avoid arrest, and protect her husband’s reputation. He was a high-ranking military officer who didn’t deserve a scandal he might not endure—a wife who helped Jews.

“Where are you taking us?” one girl asked as they rushed down the street.

“Away from the soldiers,” Monika hissed, making sure no one could hear. She leaned closer to them. “What are your names?”

“I’m Hedy,” said the oldest. “And this is my sister Ruth.”

“How old are you?” Monika asked.

“I’m seven,” Hedy said. “Ruth is six.”

Monika smiled. They were sweet children. Some of their innocence was still intact, even with all they had been through. “You’ll have to trust me,” she said. “I’m trying to help you.”

When they reached the corner, Monika looked back. Two soldiers had left the plaza and were coming down the street, still a full block behind them. They stopped a woman with black hair who had two children with her. She rooted through her purse and gave them her identity papers.

Monika gasped. The soldiers were looking for her. Once they finished with the woman, they would close the distance between them quickly, unhindered by two little girls moving as fast as they could. She had to keep going. It was her only option. But she couldn’t outrun them. She had to outsmart them.

“Hurry, children,” she said. “Come this way.” She turned at the corner, hoping the soldiers hadn’t seen them.

The girls followed with no complaints, two children with dirty faces looking lost in a world that had left them behind. “Why are you walking so fast?” Hedy asked.

“I’ll explain later,” Monika said. “But we have to hurry.”

“We’re going as fast as we can,” Ruth said.

Monika looked at the girls, abandoned at such a tender age. How many more Jewish orphans wandered the streets, their parents taken away and never returning? Many Jews lived in Vienna, but their numbers dwindled daily. Few associated with them, convinced by propaganda that they were subhumans who spread disease, couldn’t be trusted, and destroyed civilizations.  

As they rushed down the road, they were viewed with suspicion—arched eyebrows, tilted heads, or inquisitive stares. An older couple stopped in front of them. The woman frowned with disapproval, eyeing Monika in her expensive skirt, blouse, and pearl necklace with two little girls in soiled dresses. Others paid little attention, but she knew it didn’t matter. They would betray her instantly if questioned by soldiers or policemen—with no regrets. It was a dangerous time to be alive. She could trust no one. 

“What’s wrong?” Ruth asked, eyeing her warily. “Are we in trouble?”

“No, you’re not in trouble,” Monika said, trying to reassure them. 

A policeman came from the opposite direction, approaching the nearest corner. Monika looked over her shoulder—the soldiers were still coming—and then looked at the policeman. He was strolling down the street, gazing in shop windows with no apparent destination. He would pay little attention to a woman with two little girls. But Monika couldn’t take that chance.

They reached a narrow alley between two buildings, and she led the girls into it. To her dismay, it didn’t pass through to the adjacent street. It was more of an alcove, home to side doors from adjacent shops and rubbish cans. She led the girls to the back, ten meters from the pavement. A stray cat lounged on top of a rubbish can, ready to hiss if disturbed. He eyed them suspiciously for a moment and then protested loudly before scampering away.

“What are we doing here?” Hedy asked.

“We’re resting for a moment,” Monika said, not wanting to alarm them.

“I’m hungry,” Ruth said, looking up at Monika with big brown eyes.

“We’ll eat soon,” Monika said. “I promise.”

They waited for a few minutes, but Monika didn’t see the policeman or soldiers pass by. She tentatively moved forward, staying close to the building.

“Where are you going?” Hedy asked.

“Wait here for a minute,” Monika said. She pointed behind a rubbish can next to the wall. It would hide them, should anyone look in.

She went to the edge of the alcove and peeked around the building. She didn’t see the policeman. He must have turned at the corner. But the two soldiers were coming. They had stopped to question an older man, probably asking if he had seen them.

“Come on, girls,” Monika said, leading them back to the street. 

“Where are we going?” Hedy asked.

“I’m taking you to my house,” Monika said. 

The girls seemed satisfied. Monika quickly hugged them and then eyed the pursuing soldiers. They still talked to the old man. The leader, a stocky man holding his rifle, turned abruptly and saw her. He stared for a moment and then shouted to his companion, pointing to her and the children. The soldiers came toward them, walking briskly at first and then breaking into a trot.

Monika’s heart raced. “Hurry,” she said, trying to stay calm. 

She led the children forward, holding each of their hands. She paused at the corner, saw the policeman down the street on the right, so she turned left. It would lead to her flat, in a roundabout way. She brought the girls thirty meters farther and turned right onto a narrow lane.

“Is this where you live?” asked Ruth, the youngest.

“Almost,” Monika said. 

She glanced back to see how close the soldiers were. They were gaining, having turned the corner. They looked in both directions, saw her at the edge of the alley, and started running. 

Monika had to react quickly. “Let’s play a game,” she said to the girls, forcing a smile.

“What game?” Ruth asked.

“Let’s see how fast we can run,” Monika said, still holding their hands. “Come on. It’ll be fun.”

“Halt!” one soldier called.

She looked back. The soldiers were at the end of the alley, hurrying toward them.

Monika and the children raced to the end of the alley. She turned right—the soldiers could no longer see them—and kept running. But she wasn’t sure where to go.

A strange man watched them from a crooked doorway. “Quick,” he called to Monika. “Hide in here.”


You can pick up your copy of this book on Amazon. It is also available to read with #KindleUnlimited subscription.


John Anthony Miller


John Anthony Miller writes all things historical—thrillers, mysteries, and romance. He sets his novels in exotic locations spanning all eras of space and time, with complex characters forced to face inner conflicts—fighting demons both real and imagined. He’s published twenty novels and ghostwritten several others, including Another Soul Saved. He lives in southern New Jersey.

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Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Book Spotlight - Fool (A Tudor Novel) by Mary Lawrence


Fool
(A Tudor Novel)
By Mary Lawrence


Publication Date: April 14th, 2026
Publisher: Red Puddle Print
Pages: 322
Genre: Historical Fiction / Historical Mystery


Betrayal. Power. Perception. The most dangerous mind at court belongs to a fool.


From the author of The Alchemist's Daughter comes a dark tale of ambition and survival.


"One of the most vibrant characters I've encountered in years."--Goodreads Ecostell


Kronos is a fool--mocked for his dwarfism, prized for his juggling, and underestimated by everyone who matters. But in a court ruled by paranoia and whispers, invisibility is its own kind of power.


When Kronos overhears a secret that could destroy Queen Katherine Howard, he becomes a liability the crown cannot afford. Silenced, mutilated, and left for dead, he survives--barely.


Rescued by an ambitious apothecary, Kronos soon realizes he has not escaped danger--he has merely changed masters. His secret is worth a fortune...and powerful men are willing to kill to control it.


But Kronos has spent his life being overlooked and he's ready to use that to his advantage.


As rival factions circle and scheme, Kronos sets a plan in motion--one that could topple the mighty, rewrite his fate, and force his foes to reconsider which of them is truly...the fool.


Perfect for fans of C.J. Sansom and Philippa Gregory.


Praise 


'Fool is a masterclass in immersive storytelling'
~ Tony Riches, bestselling author of The Tudor Trilogy


'Fool brings the Tudor world to life through an exciting narrative voice, placing real historical figures--Henry VIII, Katherine Howard, and Archbishop Cranmer--at the heart of the drama. Its unforgettable narrator, Kronos, the king's sharp-witted court fool, survives on intelligence and observations rather than power, moving invisibly through corridors of influence. Vividly written and grounded in scrupulous research, the novel captures both the dark comedy and lethal danger of Henry VIII's court.'

~ Nancy Bilyeau, author of The CrownThe Chalice, and The Tapestry


'A thoughtful and unsparing Tudor novel that reframes the court jester not as comic ornament but as a precarious witness to power.'
~ Megan Parker, for IndieReader




Universal Buy Link


Mary Lawrence


Mary Lawrence is the author of the Bianca Goddard mysteries, a 5-book series that takes place in the slums of Tudor London featuring the daughter of an infamous alchemist.

Suspense Magazine named The Alchemist’s Daughter and The Alchemist of Lost Souls best historical mysteries of 2015 and 2017. Her writing has been published in several journals, including The Daily Beast.

When she is not writing, she tends a small berry farm in Maine with her husband and creates artisanal jams for sale at market.

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Book Review: The Enemy's Wife (Survivors of War Series) by Deborah Swift

The Enemy's Wife (Survivors of War Series) By Deborah Swift Publication Date: April 6th, 2026 Publisher: HQ Digital Pages: 380 Genre: Hi...