"While comparisons to Anna Karenina could be made, Julia is made of stronger stuff, and eventually, she crafts a useful life and is able to discover some measure of peace. The author's careful attention to period detail, complemented by clean prose, is a special strength of this book. The effects of wartime ruin are vividly rendered, and one can almost taste the dust falling through the stairs during bombing raids."--
Booklist (Starred Review)
"Readers who enjoy introspective and morally ambiguous tales such as Jojo Moyes's
The Last Letter from Your Lover and Anita Shreve's
The Pilot's Wife will want to pick up this tale from a promising writer . . . Wilhide delves deep into the human psyche, especially when it comes to loving and losing."--
Library Journal "Heart-wrenching . . .Wilhide creates a closely detailed, finely shaded portrayal of love and war."--
Kirkus Reviews "
If I Could Tell You is a beautifully composed work of historical fiction, its atmospheric lyricism a testimony to the obvious skills of the author, who evokes Britain's past with honesty and feeling."
--Historical Novels Review "Intoxicating."--
The Times (London)
"A searing recollection of an era of terror when as the author puts it, 'people fell out of the sky.'"--
Washington Times "A heartrending story of passion and loss, beautifully crafted with finely drawn characters and wonderful detail."--Mary-Rose MacColl, internationally bestselling author of
In Falling Snow "Vivid, candid, engaging. So honest."
--Helen Dunmore, author of
Exposure "Shades of
Brief Encounter surround this wonderful, clear-eyed story set in the London blitz. As war devastates the city, love tears a woman's life apart. The story of Julia, a woman undone by her affair, is both realistic and utterly heart wrenching."--Jane Thynne, author
of The Pursuit of Pearls "Elizabeth Wilhide writes with a historian's eye and a storyteller's grace. In
If I Could Tell You, she transports readers from pre-war Britain to the Blitz and beyond, showing us how love, lust, and ultimately family can guide the heart even through the most difficult times. I fell in love with this perfectly executed take on the love triangle and the tragic heroine who turns out to be more than she ever imagined."--Karin Tanabe, author of
The Gilded Years "Unflinching, excellent...Wartime Britain has been rarely so skillfully evoked."--
Daily Mail (UK)
"Beautifully observed and written."--
Woman and Home
"An elegant, absorbing tale of hope and resilience."
--Sainsbury's Magazine