(8/15/2023)
The Secret Book of Flora Lea by Patti Callahan Henry begins in WWII with the evacuation of London’s children to escape the Blitz. Hazel and Flora are among the evacuees, leaving their mother and traveling to the safety of a small village in the North.
To help ease her younger sister’s fears and homesickness, Hazel tells Flora tales of their imaginary place – a secret place she has created for them and them alone. Her belief in their fantasy world comforts Flora and allows the little girl to begin to settle into her new home and life. Then the unthinkable happens, Flora disappears and is never found.
Moving forward to the 1960’s, Hazel, still suffering from guilt and grief over Flora’s disappearance, encounters illustrations from a published children’s book. The book’s tale is eerily like those Hazel told Flora during the war, yet no one but the girls knew of their imaginary world of Whisperwood. Hazel begins a search for answers, desperate to discover the book’s author and how she knows of Whisperwood. Could the author be the long-lost Flora?
I found myself cheering for Hazel as she encountered dead ends and blocked attempts during her search for the book’s origins, and I admired her determination as she tried to find answers to what happened to Flora.
A quietly suspenseful book, The Secret Book of Flora Lea is a welcome addition to the current list of published World War II fiction. The story of London’s evacuated children during the Blitz is not well known in the U.S., and I think Henry’s book should be read by any fan of this genre. It would be excellent as a book club choice, and I’m grateful to NetGalley and Atria Books for providing a copy to review.