Looking for a new start after her father’s death, Lara Hope arrives in Lisbon in search of a family she’s never met.
As war storms across Europe, Lara finds solace and belonging in her landlady’s tranquil bookshop in one of the most beautiful corners of the city.
But when she witnesses a customer secretly swapping a book, she realises the bookshop is not all it seems. Lara is plunged into a labyrinthine world of mystery and facades, encountering new friends, an unexpected romance, and even royalty… Is she prepared to risk it all for this new life?
Comment: Close to the end of last year, I was browsing online to pick possible Christmas' gifts and stumbled on this book. I was immediately seduced by the idea of a story set in Portugal, even if it was in the late 1930s, just so I could see places I know represented. I was also keen on the whole bookshop idea, even though I had not read anything by the author, so I've got this one for myself instead of to give it away.
Lara is the daughter of a man who loved the theater and who also loved Portugal, the country, so much that he married a Portuguese woman and they went on to live in England. Sadly, Lara's father recently died and she is ready to travel to Portugal to learn more about her Portuguese family, since her mother lost contact with them when she moved to England. However, things don't go very well for Lara and after an unfortunate event, she sees herself in need to work to gain money so she can buy a passage back to England. In the meantime, she works in a bar and in a bookshop, where she stars having contact with very special people...
I suppose I now understand why such a recent release, even in paperback, wasn't too expensive to get. I'm afraid that the writing style of this book makes it feel very dull and juvenile, and I had a hard time enjoying it. Not even the Portuguese references won it for me...
The story starts off quite well, with protagonist Lara following her father's advice to seek her family in Portugal, namely in Lisbon, and how this would help her come to terms to what her parents' relationship was, since her mother lost contact with her Portuguese family when she went to England. Since this is set around the time WWII was starting, the reaching out could not depend on digital methods, but I was curious to see how the Portuguese setting would be depicted.
Sadly, the same day she arrives in Lisbon, Lara learns that her mother's family no longer lives where her father thought they did and no one knows where they went, thus right there this is one part of the plot out of the picture. The day after, Lara is ready to go back to England but, tragedy!, her passport and money are stolen and now she has to work to get money to pay for those things... but thankfully she is able to start a job at a bar.
We move on a few months and Lara is still at the bar, and is both entertained by learning Portuguese and imitating people, a talent she has since she is an actress and when she goes back home, she will seek this as a career. But, no, it isn't this easy because her boss catches her "performing" for a bunch of Nazis, since they are everywhere, in their attempt to control Europe. Anyway, this makes it so that Lara is dismissed and then starts working at a bookshop, an element I was tremendously interested in.
Sadly once more, this isn't much of a deal either because there isn't much plot related to the actual bookshop, but mostly about Bea, the owner, and how she is somehow involved with spying for the Resistance, which leads Lara to be in the middle of this too, and what luck, her acting skills will come in handy again. Then, there's a plan to deceive the Nazis, which involves mingling with duke of Windsor and Wallis Simpson, and Otto, a Nazi officer who is actually a double agent Lara finds charming...
Now, seriously. This was.... juvenile, to use a nice word. I can see why it might appeal to some readers (and it does, looking at so many positive reviews out there) but to me it wasn't a good experience, because the plot was senseless at times, Lara was not always very aware of what she should be doing, and was actually inane most of the time, considering the time period, the secondary characters were not developed at all, and the writing lacked depth.










