3.39 AVERAGE


"What is your occupation? Housewife or housekeeper?" "Survivor."
That is the essence of this 1940s period piece about a Polish family that survived WW2 in very different ways. As they begin a new life together in post-war England, I think the author creates a believable story about a husband and wife trying to overcome the damage of war and failure. Overall, she captures subtle, gradual cracks that lead to an inevitable and necessary crisis.

This week I read 22 Britannia Road by Amanda Hodgkinson. It is about the horrors of World War II and Hitler's invasion of Poland in particular. The plot includes survival, betrayal, and ultimately, hope.

Janusk Nowak is separated from his wife, Silvana, and their baby son, Aurek, as Hitler invades Poland. He is trying to enlist in the Polish Army to fight the Nazis, but an air strike delays him. When it becomes clear that if Janusz remains in Poland he will be killed, he joins Bruno and Franuk in a trek across Europe to join the British Armed Forces.

Meanwhile, Silvana (who is named appropriately) attempts to make it to her village outside of Warsaw. The bus runs out of gas, and the encroaching Soviet and Nazi soldiers force her and Aurek to hide in the forest for years. At the end of the war, they are found by British soldiers who help reunite them with Janusz back in England.

Janusz buys a bungalow in the village of Ipswich on the eastern coast while his family is traveling to meet him. He immediately embraces all things British. He is determined to become the quintessential English family, but what he had not counted on is a wild, feral son and a wife he hardly recognizes. Both Janusz and Silvana have dark secrets from the war and very deep emotional scars.

Although this book is difficult, it is an excellent story. I must admit I was stunned by Silvana's secret which was not revealed until 3/4 through the book. Hodgkinson is an excellent writer, but she uses simile and metaphor extensively. They were VERY GOOD similes and metaphors, so I started looking for them which became distracting. I love the ending; it is brilliant!

Since it's the Christmas season, I am going to *try* to read happy books. Although 22 Britannia Road ends happily, it about killed me getting there!

This book left me quizzical in some parts, appalled in others, and sad all in one! I had a hard time relating to any one character and couldn't even be happy for them in the end. I gave it 3 stars because it did hold my interest, but was truly hoping for a whole different story when I first started reading it!

Probably a 3.5, but this one just really hit the spot after being disappointed in several recent reads. Wartime setting, intriguing wartime alternative lives, surprising and realistic character development and relationship evolution. Great read.

I clearly had a love-hate relationship with this book. Not too much to say about it. It oscillated between shocking me out of my mind and lingering around. Some of the characters I simply hated, which I can appreciate, because not many authors can make me hate fictional characters... others I had a sort of sympathy for, but all in all, I think this book could have been written way better.
++ Also, I don't think avoiding the war was a good thing for both main characters. I think at least one of them should have been involved in the military conflict, one way or another. Living in the woods (Silvana) and drinking wine with a hotty in Southern France (Janusz) seems to me lacks a LOT of realism.
Just a general "Meh".

I wanted to like this book. Post-war England is very interesting to me, and I feel like there aren't very many WWII books written from a Polish point of view, but the story was fairly predictable in places, and the characters were lifeless and unimaginative. 2 and a half stars. If anyone knows of a really excellent post WWII or WWII book from a Polish point of view, please suggest them to me!

A good read...kind of tired of it towards the end when it jumped the shark a bit, but atmospheric story of post-WW II London and the experiences of Eastern European citizens who were not Jews but were still significantly impacted by the war.

Heartbreaking, but a great story.


Dreary! I couldn't finish it.

22 Britianna Road by Amanda Hodgkinson (RB digital loan ) it’s amazing how books can come into your life in moments that you find yourself dealing with issues that are very challenging and how that book can help you put those issues you are personally dealing with into a new perspective.

This book is at its heart a book of survival and miscommunication between survivors. When a mother and her son spend World War II hiding in the woods and the husband journeys to England to fight against the Nazis. Both the wife and the husband have considerable secrets in their closet, and these skeletons almost tears the family apart. All this could have been nipped in the bud before it got bad if both people had just been up front and honest with each other in the first place but horrible experiences are sometimes very difficult to talk about because in doing so you have to not only relieve them but admit to them happening in the first place.

This book gave me a lot to think about and relate to my own life. In that it’s an awesome book but the writing itself could be confusing and vague in some places. Overall an ok book