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The long flight home book review
The long flight home book review













the long flight home book review

That bird was like Duchess, who was the featured bird in this story. The one where a man renovating a house finds the remains of a bird with a tiny container and a coded message inside the container. So I was familiar with this concept but I had not read the story that inspired this book.

the long flight home book review

I have read some informati0n about birds being used during the war to help relay coded messages. Yet, they were so engaging and very likeable that it was easy to become very in tune to their stories. The book is told from their points of view. The Long Flight Home is a five star recommended read!Bertie and Ollie were great characters. In fact, I would actually put The Long Flight Home in the same category up there with The Book Thief by Markus Zusak. One that will have readers talking for years. “Hlad adeptly drives home the devastating civilian cost of the war.” Yet Duchess will become an unexpected lifeline, relaying messages between Susan and Ollie as war rages on-and proving, at last, that hope is never truly lost. Soon a friendship between Ollie and Susan deepens, but when his plane is downed behind enemy lines, both know how remote the chances of reunion must be. Those that do will bring home crucial information. His quest brings him to Epping and the National Pigeon Service, where Susan is involved in a new, covert mission to air-drop hundreds of homing pigeons in German-occupied France. Thousands of miles away in Buxton, Maine, young crop-duster pilot Ollie Evans decides to join Britain’s Royal Air Force. Hatched from an egg that Susan incubated in a bowl under her grandfather’s desk lamp, Duchess shares a special bond with Susan and an unusual curiosity about the human world. All her birds are extraordinary to Susan-loyal, intelligent, beautiful-but none more so than Duchess.

the long flight home book review

After losing her parents to influenza as a child, Susan found comfort in raising homing pigeons with Bertie. Enemy fighter planes blacken the sky around the Epping Forest home of Susan Shepherd and her grandfather, Bertie. It is September 1940-a year into the war-and as German bombs fall on Britain, fears grow of an impending invasion. Inspired by fascinating, true, yet little-known events during World War II, The Long Flight Home is a testament to the power of courage in our darkest hours-a moving, masterfully written story of love and sacrifice.















The long flight home book review