Member Reviews

Madeleine Bunting has written a book that works on different levels. It’s a story about how a young girl managed in the second world war in occupied Guernsey, a love story and a tale about the search of a daughter for her family history.

She has previously written a book about the occupation (The Model Occupation) so has done her research and I’m sure that many of the details were rooted in reality – and these don’t make for easy reading. She also managed to create a very real Guernsey for me, bringing town, country – and modern bungalow-land - vividly to life.

In 1940, a young Helene Lacheur is living at home in rural Guernsey with her father and her nanna. Her new husband has just gone off to war and the Germans have just invaded the island. Over the next few years, we see get a glimpse of how difficult Helene’s forced interaction with the enemy is and how living in a small, closed community paid havoc with relationships.

Skip forward forty years and Helene has recently died. Her daughter Roz is faced with revelations about her family’s past and decides to do some research into her background, discovering a hidden side to her mother. Her travels bring her to Guernsey, naturally, but also to Berlin and to modern day Russia.

Using the dual timeframe narrative device, Madeleine Bunting tells the story in a deceptively simple way which made me want to know how it ends. And whilst the story is well worth reading throughout, keep reading for the twist at the end.

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What an amazing read this story was. Madeleine Bunting has done a great deal of research into how the war affected The Channel Islands and in particular Guernsey. This is love story of great depth, a mystery waiting to be solved laced with historical facts. I have not read a book that enthralled me as much as this one did for a while and cannot wait to see if this author decides to write more books as I will be first in the line to buy whatever she writes.

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Island Song is a brilliant story told in two timelines ,during the German Occupation of Guernsey in WW2 and present day .Roz's Mother Helene has died and a letter left to her tells her the person she always thought of as her Father was not !!! Roz travels to Guernsey where her Mother was born in search of her Family history .This is such a well written book a real page turner and the descriptions are wonderful ,all the characters come to life ,what an amazing book and I just loved the ending .10 stars if I could . Many thanks to the Publisher ,the Author and NetGalley for my copy in return for an honest review.

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This is a really interesting read. I did not know a lot about the German occupation of Guernsey during World War 2. This part of Guernseys history is intriguing. It is told with an empathy that drew me in from the start. Roz is on an emotional journey to find out who her father is and what type of life her mother led during and after World War 2. Helene has kept her early life a secret so there are a few shocks for Roz. This is a beautifully written story that had me gripped the whole way through.

Thank you to Netgalley for my copy.

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When Roz's mother Helene dies Roz is given a letter that will tear her life apart and make her question everything she has ever known.
The man she thought was her father wasn't and with little to go on but her mother's maiden name and place of birth Roz tries to find out who her real father was. Her investigations take her to Guernsey where her mum lived during the occupation by Germany during World War II.
As Roz uncovers more about Helene's life and what she went through in the War she begins to wonder if she really does want to know who her father was.
The story is told from the point of view of the two women, Roz in the 90's and Helene in the 40's. It gives a good insight into what life must have been like under German occupation and of the hardship and dilemmas faced by the islanders of Guernsey during that time.

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A marvellously descriptive book, that cries out to be made into a film. It is told through the dual narrative medium. Helene is the mother in 1940s occupied Channel Island, Guernsey. Roz is her daughter, whom we first meet at her mothers funeral.
Helene bequeaths a letter to Roz ,which sets her on a journey to discover her family history. Who was her real father,and who indeed was her mother? Along the way, Roz finds her history is intertwined with a German officer , the theft of art treasures and the persecution of Jewish families during the Holocaust, and Russian slave labourers on Guernsey. Roz has to find out the connection between all these variables in order to complete her personal search for answers.
I found out some fascinating facts and real shocks about the German occupation of Guernsey. What life was like for the islanders, and how they must have felt being abandoned by the British, the sense of betrayal must have been unforgivable. The hardships and sacrifices experienced by the islanders ,and the cruelty shown to them and the Russian prisoners was intense. The bitterness expressed in modern times about the collaboration of the islanders during the war, when most people would have done exactly the same, in order to survive, is very telling.
It is a compelling story about forbidden love and many secrets. Roz has a search on her hands to find out the truth about her parentage and her enigmatic mother. There is a surprising twist in the tale, but I thought the ending was too abrupt and sudden. No sooner had you read the surprise, than the book threw you out of the story! I did enjoy this book, it sucked you in and created such curiosity , it was a real page turner. Well researched and gave a historical lesson along the way.

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Roz has just lost her mother when she finds out that her father wasn't her father. He has left her a letter but who is her real father? Her mother has always kept her young life a secret and as Roz starts to investigate it seems that her mother, Helene, was born and raised on Guernsey and lived through the occupation. Roz wants to find her father but it seems that Guernsey holds many secrets. She travels to Russia and Berlin in the hope of finding an answer.
This is a lovely read which deals sensitively with the subject of the occupation and human relationships and who can say what is right and wrong?

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I did enjoy this book although it took a little time to get into the rhythm of the writing. It’s not a period of history I am too familiar with so good to learn something new and an interesting twist at the end.

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I really enjoyed this book and although I expected it to be a typical romance with the added bonus of a daughter searching for her mother’s story, the reality was very far from my expectations. Madeleine Bunting has written a gritty novel based on real life stories of occupied Guernsey where people learned to adapt to survive. There is romance but there is also a very human story of acceptance and sadness and ultimately hope. I visited Guernsey on holiday several years ago so the descriptions of the island resonated with me - it’s a part of history we should really know more about.

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A terribly sad story all round. The romances were odd and perhaps not as believable as they could have been. I did have to do a fair amount of skim reading to speed things along a bit as it was quite slow going. I was glad I stuck doggedly to it though to get to that final little twist. Without giving away spoilers, it’s quite similar in some ways to Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society in terms of an illicit romance and a hidden Russian so it felt a familiar tale. I am however now intrigued by the author’s non fic book Model Occupation and will be buying a copy of that.

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Thank you to Net Galley for an early copy for an honest review with no spoilers.

This is a book that I would be happy to recommend to friends and family. I had very little knowledge of the occupation of Guernsey during World War 2 but felt the need after reading this novel to learn more about this island.

The author really brought the characters (and the island) to life and I found myself willing them to solve the mysteries that I was waking up in the night and thinking about. I also found myself wondering how I would have coped with the situation Helene was in.

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One of the reasons people like dramas set during war time is that the moral choices seem to be so much clearer and more absolute. In Madeleine Bunting's debut novel, however, the opposite is true.

Set both in the present and during the second world war, Island Song examines the fate of Helene Le Lacheur, a young woman stranded on Guernsey during the Nazi occupation. She has lost touch with her husband who is serving somewhere in France, her father has been deported to a prison camp, she is hiding an escaped Russian slave-labourer, and at the same time she finds herself gradually drawn into a love-affair with Heinrich, an intelligent, charming, but ambivalent German officer.

Helene's story is revealed both through glimpses of her own experience and through a series of imaginative conjectures, sometimes accurate sometimes not, on the part of Roz, her daughter who is trying to unravel her mother's history after her death. Roz is assisted in her investigations by Antoine, a French academic trying to trace works of art stolen by the Nazis.

It's a story firmly grounded in a sense of place: the sights, smells and social life of Guernsey, past and present, are strongly evoked, making the island one of the strongest characters in the narrative. But it's precisely this intense insularity that is Helene's undoing. She can neither escape the watchful eyes nor the stern judgement of her fellow islanders and when her precarious balancing act finally comes to an end retribution awaits.

A novel about compromise and survival, Island Song picks apart the confused notions of history and identity that attach themselves to our understanding of Europe's past and of our own present, and in doing so demonstrates how courage can coexist with confusion. A brave story, delicately put together.

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Thanks to netgalley for an early copy in return for an honest review
Firstly I just want to say this is an utterly brilliant work of fictional brilliance.
From the first page it has you totally captivated such
A brilliant plot with the twin timing that slipped so easy between the two era's I want to give nothing away I really can't praise this book enough and will be telling family and friends this book deserves more stars than I can give utterly BRILLIANT EXTRAVAGANZA.

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Having long been aware of the turbulent wartime experiences of the Channel Islands I love reading books set in that location and time period. This one might even beat Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society to my top spot of favourite fiction.
The nearly modern setting blends seamlessly with the historical sections and I could ‘see’ both fully. I loved both timelines and in setting Ros’s story just before the explosion of the Internet made it unfold at a clever pace, making it feel like an old fashioned mystery rather than a super sleuthing social media case.
I really didn’t spot the ending at all, and rather than being eye rollingly sensational it felt just right.

It has left me wanting to know more about two of the peripheral characters and their story arc resolution but over all I loved this, and can’t wait until it is published to buy copies for friends.

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This poignant and compelling story begins with the death of enigmatic matriarch, Helene. She bequeaths a letter to her daughter, Roz, and the information left behind triggers a quest to unearth the truth about Helen’s past in 1940’s occupied Guernsey. This is a dual narrative set both in the present and during World War Two. As Helene’s backstory gradually unravels, a plethora of painful secrets from the past are revealed, which take Roz on a journey of self-discovery - in tandem with the wider quest of French art historian, Antoine. Together their joint research pieces together her own personal family history and how it is inextricably intertwined with a German officer, the persecution of Jewish families in occupied Paris. and Russian slave labourers on the island.

This is a meticulously researched, authentic depiction of the hardships endured by Channel Islanders under the Nazi regime, which evokes the brutality and sacrifices necessitated by the wartime occupation. Madeleine Bunting’s narrative is well-crafted and I was so hooked by this story of forbidden love, family ties and the wartime bonds of friendship that I read it almost continuously over one weekend. I cared about the lives of this credible cast of characters and like all the most enjoyable stories, felt sad to reach the final page and leave the characters behind.

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A stunning, compelling read with characters who will stay with you long after you have reluctantly finished the last page. Madeleine Bunting's impeccable research which she carried out for her non-fiction work on the Channel Islands under German rule gives a sound base for Island Song, which gives the dual narrative of Helene, a Guernsey islander during the occupation and her daughter Roz. A letter given to Roz after the death of her parents shakes her to her roots and she embarks on a journey, not only to find out who she is, but who her enigmatic mother was. Twists and turns all the way. Mystery, romance, deprivation, violence, kindness, small islander mentality all combine to give the reader an unforgettable story which is crying out to be made into a film.

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Woah, what a brilliant story! Based on the true German occupation of the Channel Islands during WW2, this story really details the conditions that the local population were living under, and also delves into artworks lost during the period. Absolutely fascinating and historically accurate, this book covers it all. I loved it and really couldn’t put it down, I really wanted to know how it was all going to end. And then the ending................I don’t want to give anything away, but wow! Highly recommend that you pick this up. It will keep you totally gripped.

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I read this book in almost one sitting. I am a fan of "The Guernsey Literacy and Potato Peel Pie Society" and thought this would bring added fictional insight into life in Guernsey during the occupation during World War II. I was not disappointed. It is a mixture of romantic fiction and mystery. There are a number of false clues and the twist at the end had been hinted at but my mind had delivered other solutions. In modern times of the Internet and the tools for tracing genealogy some of the 'finds' took a long time, I had to keep working out the date of the explorations and reminding myself how such research was much more plodding than today.

The descriptions of characters were interesting and I felt as though I could picture Guernsey. Helene whilst seeming naive at times could easily have taken the actions she did. At other times in Guernsey she appeared to be more sophisticated and worldly wise but was she? The woman she became was not a surprise once the story is understood. I finished the book feeling disturbed and a little unsure whether the story did hold together. In writing this review I have realised that something similar happened to my Great Grandfather and now I have greater insight into what he felt, although Roz's feelings do take a back seat. She often feels confused about who she is but I am not sure we really learn much about her inner feelings. A deeper exploration of these would have made the book longer and the descriptions might not have added much to the book so in essence I feel the author has the balance right between detailed feelings with confusion and continuing the investigation at a pace meant to keep the reader interested.

I shall certainly look out for other books by the same author in the future.

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Intriguing and well written story of someone trying to discover the truth about their family history. Evocative descriptions and well rounded characters made this believable and compelling. Intriguing twist at the end too!
I really enjoyed this title, thank you.

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