
Exeter, 1925.
Della Wilde has set aside her dream of moving to Paris to study at the renowned Le Cordon Bleu, choosing instead to support her family torn apart by war. By night, she works at the prestigious Ambrose Café, serving the city’s elite – she feels utterly invisible. Until a chance
encounter with rebellious Alice Winters, the daughter of a powerful MP, upends Della’s world.
Alice is a woman caught between duty and desire. She secretly yearns to be an artist but is expected to marry a respectable suitor and raise a family. Della, with her sharp wit and quiet strength, is unlike anyone she has ever known. She makes Alice feel alive. So she draws Della into her orbit – first as a muse for her secret art, then as something infinitely more intimate.
But in a world where reputations are easily shattered, their growing bond is a danger that threatens not only their futures, but those around them. As Alice risks scandal and Della faces the consequences of following her heart, they must will they allow others to choose their path, or dare to forge their own?

Inspired by her childhood fascination with old films which led to a career as a Film Archivist, Carryl’s debut novel The Forgotten Life of Connie Harris is a dual timeline story set against the immersive backdrop of cinema. Originally from the Isle of Wight, Carryl now lives in Devon with her husband, son and a cat called Ditsy who keeps her company while she types.
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My thoughts: Set in a time when being openly in a same sex relationship was illegal and dangerous, this follows the lives of two young women, Della and Alice, as they meet, fall in love and risk everything they have.
Della works in the kitchens of the Ambrose, making beautiful cakes and dainty patisserie for the well heeled customers. After a wild birthday party that she made the cake for, she discovers birthday girl Alice asleep under a table in the ballroom. Smuggling her out so as not to draw attention (Alice’s father is an MP) the two women feel a connection.
They’re from different worlds, Alice’s life is whirl of parties and lunches, playing both the wild party girl and the dutiful daughter. Della is the only member of her family currently drawing a wage, the war having taken her father and two eldest brothers. Her mother is prone to bouts of depression and she has three more brothers at home. She can’t risk scandal or losing her job.
But neither woman can deny the spark between them. Unfortunately there are jealous eyes upon them and when things turn ugly, they have to face up to the fact that not everyone is happy for them. They find a true friend in Alice’s family butler, and she learns her parents’ secrets. Can they stay together in the face of opposition that threatens to tear them apart?
Insightful, written with compassion and care, this is a love story that we don’t often see, proof that there have been queer couples hiding in plain sight all along, not just “good friends” but forced to play a terrifying game of hide and seek. Thankfully that has changed in many ways, and women like Alice and Della can love openly.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in this blog tour, but all opinions remain my own.
Thank you for being a part of the tour x
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