The secret of midwives by Sally Hepworth

Read this if you love happy endings and a cast of female characters dealing with female issues, or as some would describe women’s fiction. It is told in the alternate voices of 3 generations of a family, Flo, Grace and Neva, who are all midwives. The voices are seamless as their stories are told, which are all centered on the theme of mothering. While being a good story I felt the story lacked the drama and twists of similar types of novels.

Devotion by Hannah Kent

In Prussia, in the 1830s, Hanne is a nature-loving girl on the brink of womanhood. Her family are old Lutherans, and the practice of their religion is banned, so her town sets out to emigrate to South Australia via a harrowing sea voyage. This is the interesting historical setting, but the heart of the book is a love story between Hanne and another young girl, Thea. A love for nature, the nature of love, and how nature is involved in love; it has supernatural elements, is deeply atmospheric, poetic and lyrical. Perhaps I am a touch old and jaded, but while I found it evocative and beautiful most of the time, occasionally the girls’ consuming passion became wearisome to me. For lovers of language, love, nature, and history.