Mr.
Churchill’s Secretary by Susan Elia MacNeal (Bantam Books, 2011) is
the first of eight, so far, historical thrillers set during World War II
featuring Margaret Hope, an English citizen raised in the United States. When
Maggie’s parents were killed in a car accident, her aunt in Wellesley,
Massachusetts, took her in, where Maggie was raised in an academic tradition.
Excelling in mathematics, in the spring of 1940 Maggie is preparing to enter
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for doctoral work when her
grandmother in London dies. Maggie goes to London to close out her estate and
sell the huge Victorian house, which languishes on the market as war gets
closer.
Maggie
applies for work with the English Government and, despite her excellent
research credentials, is relegated to the job of typist for Winston Churchill
soon after he takes office as prime minister. She takes in a few boarders and
prepares to wait out the war, to the great dismay of her aunt. Churchill is a
demanding employer but Maggie finds the work is immensely rewarding. She also
finds there are those who would exploit the knowledge she gains by typing the
great man’s memos and letters.
This is a
fast-moving story that is mostly faithful to the time and place of its setting,
although there are a few historical discrepancies. The IRA and the pacifist
movement are both represented, as are the brilliant denizens of Bletchley Park.
I liked the sketches of the roommates. Some reviews complain that the book
reads like a history text, and parts of it are overloaded with research. I have
always been in awe of the English people’s spirit and courage during this bleak
and frightening time so I can cut the book some slack. Coincidence plays a
larger role than it should have perhaps as a plot to assassinate Churchill is
foiled, and a couple of the enemy agents are remarkably unprepared to kill
their victims, which I suspect was not the case in real life. Overall a pleasant
read if not terribly realistic.
·
Paperback: 384 pages
·
Publisher: Bantam; 2011
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 9780553593617
·
ISBN-13: 978-0553593617
Aubrey
Hamilton ©2019
Aubrey
Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and
reads mysteries at night.
I loved this entire series. The first one is best, but each is good.
ReplyDelete