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In Falling Snow (2012)

by Mary-Rose MacColl

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24211112,465 (3.83)16
Fiction. Literature. HTML:For fans of Vera Brittain's Testament of Youth, a bestselling writer's American debut and a heart-wrenching novel of WWIâ??a tale of love, regret, and the powerful draw of the road not taken

Iris Crane's tranquil life is shattered when a letter summons memories from her bittersweet past: her first love, her best friend, and the tragedy that changed everything. Iris, a young Australian nurse, travels to France during World War I to bring home her fifteen-year-old brother, who ran away to enlist. But in Paris she meets the charismatic Dr. Frances Ivens, who convinces Iris to help establish a field hospital in the old abbey at Royaumont, staffed entirely by womenâ??a decision that will change her life. Seamlessly interwoven is the story of Grace, Iris's granddaughter in 1970s Australia. Together their narratives paint a portrait of the changing role of women in medicine and the powerful legacy of love.


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» See also 16 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 11 (next | show all)
Fabulous book, moving and tender. A wonderful story, one I won't soon forget. ( )
  SharleneMartinMoore | Apr 24, 2021 |
I found this book in the Peddlers Mall. The cover compared this book to another I liked very much, so for q buck I bought it.

Absolutely wonderful. After years of WWII books, a WWI was a change of pace that dovetailed with seeing the recently released movie 1917.

Great story that resonates today as much as 100 years ago in regards to a woman's strength and abilities. ( )
  Alphawoman | Feb 8, 2020 |
Book received from GoodReads FirstReads program. Thanks for the book!

In Falling Snow was an easier read than I first imagined. And I don't mean that it was light material easy to read. But everything flowed so well. Even when we had sudden scene, POV, or timeline switches, I was able to follow along with absolutely no bumps and continue to enjoy this wonderful story. I don't think I can remember right now a book with such a free-flowing narrative and seamless story-telling.

I also enjoyed the characters immensely. Everyone felt very real, with all the quirks, faults, and love that everyday people have. Everyone was very distinct as well. From Iris' strength and deterioration to Grace's practical logic to Violet's larger than life approach to everything, every individual shone with life, vivacity, and yet intimacy as well. I really felt like I knew everyone on a very personal level.

Both WWI historical and '70's obstetrical worlds intrigued me. Learning the hard road many women doctors and professionals have had to take in both eras entertained and taught me at the same time. The author captures the triumphs and the hardships very well and makes the reader engaged in every step these women took towards their goals. I really enjoyed seeing how the individual women reacted to the struggles of their calling, from Grace's very logical approach to her friends cynicism to Frances' almost blind optimism to Violet's very hard go-getter attitude. Each individually shone in her brilliance and brought both eras to vivid life through their individual struggles.

The author kept me engaged throughout the entire book with jaw-dropping twists, realistically messy lives, and characters made for the big screen yet that also feel like I could have a coffee with them and feel at home. I learned about and got into the book because of the historical aspect but found myself enjoying so much more of it. I highly enjoyed every word and recommend this very highly. ( )
  Sarah_Gruwell | Jan 12, 2016 |
A beautiful, lyrical, emotional novel set during the First World War. Australian nurse Iris Crane travels to France to find her young brother, who has joined up to fight for the British. A chance meeting in Paris with Frances Ivens of the Scottish Women's Hospitals leads Iris to help with establishing Royaumont Abbey, a military hospital for French soldiers close to the front. At Royaumont, Iris becomes good friends with ambulance driver Violet Heron, falls for an enigmatic French doctor, and manages to locate her errant baby brother - but the war changes all her plans for the future. Offset against Iris' life in France is the story of Grace, Iris' granddaughter, another medical woman struggling with decisions made in the past and the implications for her family in the years to come.

Apart from the twist at the end, which I felt was unnecessary, I was absolutely bowled over by Mary-Rose MacColl's novel. Iris, Grace, Violet, and even the fictional representation of the real-life Miss Frances Ivens, are such strong yet sympathetic characters, living their lives and doing what they believe to be for the best. The author pulls no punches with depictions of the war and the devastation wreaked in the trenches and at home, and her prose is poetic without turning purple. Female doctors like Miss Ivens really risked life and reputation to set up a womens' hospital in the thirteenth century abbey, and Mary Rose MacColl's poignant embroidery around the truth of their bravery and compassion brings the past to life in a way that non-fiction accounts cannot.

Readers who enjoyed Jojo Moyes' novel The Girl You Left Behind will love this First World War counterpart. ( )
  AdonisGuilfoyle | Mar 9, 2014 |
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Epigraph
It was a lesson about ordinary people and
the lesson was that they were not ordinary.


Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating,
Remembrance Day 1993
Dedication
In memory of Elizabeth J Cooley
1927-2011
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Afterwards, she would find herself unable to describe the old man with whom they shared the elevator, other than a lascivious smile, as if he knew.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Fiction. Literature. HTML:For fans of Vera Brittain's Testament of Youth, a bestselling writer's American debut and a heart-wrenching novel of WWIâ??a tale of love, regret, and the powerful draw of the road not taken

Iris Crane's tranquil life is shattered when a letter summons memories from her bittersweet past: her first love, her best friend, and the tragedy that changed everything. Iris, a young Australian nurse, travels to France during World War I to bring home her fifteen-year-old brother, who ran away to enlist. But in Paris she meets the charismatic Dr. Frances Ivens, who convinces Iris to help establish a field hospital in the old abbey at Royaumont, staffed entirely by womenâ??a decision that will change her life. Seamlessly interwoven is the story of Grace, Iris's granddaughter in 1970s Australia. Together their narratives paint a portrait of the changing role of women in medicine and the powerful legacy of love.


From the Trade Paperback edition

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Iris is getting old. A widow, her days are spent living quietly and worrying about her granddaughter, Grace, a headstrong young doctor. It's a small sort of life. But one day an invitation comes for Iris through the post to a reunion in France, where she served in a hospital during World War I.

Determined to go, Iris is overcome by memories of the past when, as a shy, naive young woman, she followed her fifteen-year-old brother Tom to France in 1914 intending to bring him home.

On her way to find Tom, Iris comes across the charismatic Miss Ivens, who is setting up a field hospital in the old abbey of Royaumont, North of Paris. Putting her fears aside, Iris decides to stay at Royaumont, and it is there that she truly comes of age, finding her capability and her strength, discovering her passion for medicine, making friend with the vivacious Violet and falling in love.

But war is a brutal thing and , when the ultimate tragedy happens, there is a terrible price that Iris has to pay, a price that will echo down the generations.
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