Moonlight and Lovesongs

by Lilian Harry

Published 19 May 1997
MOONLIGHT AND LOVESONGS concludes this epic saga by interweaving the stories of two of the younger women in the street - one desperately searching the wartorn city for her lost baby, and one passionately in love - but not with her new husband. 1945 will leave no life unchanged - least of all theirs.

v. 1

Goodbye Sweetheart

by Lilian Harry

Published 11 August 1994

From the outbreak of the Second World War to the evacuation of Dunkirk, GOODBYE SWEETHEART follows the fortunes of the people who live in a working-class street in Portsmouth.

Like any street, April Grove in Portsmouth has its good and bad neighbours, its gossip, scandal and romance. But the outbreak of war in 1939 changes everything - especially for the children. Uprooted from their familiar urban existence they are evacuated (some happily, some not) to the country. Then there are the teenagers, whose first loves are accelerated and intensified by the threat of separation; and men and women, too old to fight, who hold the life of the street together.

Based on the author's own childhood memories of growing up near Portsmouth, this is a novel which shows us what England was really like then - a story told with such nostalgia and charm that you leave the world it describes longing for the chance to return.


v. 2

The Girls They Left Behind

by Lilian Harry

Published 9 October 1995
This saga centres on the Budd family, a working-class family in Portsmouth. The horror of the air raid sirens sounding at night and the naval dockyards buzzing with the activity of war provide the backdrop to tales of loyalty, heroism, heartache and love during the city's finest hour.

v. 3

Keep Smiling Through

by Lilian Harry

Published 22 July 1996
It is May 1941, and the people of April Grove, Portsmouth, are beginning to feel the war will never end. Families are being torn apart, not only by the separations and loss of war, but by more unexpected frictions, as wives and daughters play new and independent roles, and children are forced to grow up too fast. Betty faces conflict at home over the man that she loves; Carol is desperate to escape her carping mother; and Micky nearly brings tragedy to them all. Yet as the war irredeemably changes their lives, the families of April Grove learn to endure, and even to keep smiling through.