One Final Turn by Ashley Weaver

One Final Turn (Electra McDonnell, #5)

Barbara’s rating: 5 out of 5 Stars
Series: Electra McDonnell #5
Publication Date: 6/3/25
Period: WWII
Number of Pages: 304

I know everyone is eager to read this exciting wrap-up to the series, but we’re also saddened by the series’ end. However, if the series had to end, this book was the perfect story for it. All of the characters get their happy endings, and the readers get an exciting, poignant, bittersweet tale of intrigue, betrayal, and espionage in the exotic city of Lisbon, Portugal. What more could we ask for – other than more books in the series?

Electra and Major Ramsey are still estranged after their previous argument when he fired her. However, Electra is determined to do everything possible to find her cousin Toby, who was a German POW but has escaped. Captain Billingsly offers Electra a chance to be a part of his mission to Lisbon, where they hope to trace the escape route POWs are using to make their way out of Germany. Captain Billingsly’s mission is to trace the route and then put measures in place to fortify the route so the crossings are safer for the POWs. Electra’s mission is to help Captain Billingsly and to discover and rescue Toby. Did I mention that Major Ramsey is also assigned to the same mission? Yep – Electra and Ramsey have to suck it up and learn to play nice.

Lisbon, Portugal, is everything London is not, and that intrigues, unnerves, and perplexes Electra. She loves how exciting and lively the city is, but can’t help compare it to London’s bomb pocked streets, the complete blackouts at night, and the general melancholy of its citizens. Of course, Lisbon is also full of spies, so it isn’t safe to trust anyone, and soon the body count begins to rise as they make contacts and ask questions. Will all of them make it through the mission? Will they complete the mission and find Toby? Will Electra and Ramsey finally allow their true feelings to surface? You’ll just have to read the book to find out the answers.

If you haven’t read the earlier books in the series, I highly recommend you do so because they are great. I also think reading those would make this book even more enjoyable because you’ll understand the characters’ histories and how it all came to be. Each book in the series is interesting, exciting, and filled with wonderful characters with whom you’d love to sit and chat. This final book in the series wraps up all of the loose ends and provides an intriguing, exciting mystery to boot.

I voluntarily read an early copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

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The Booklover’s Library by Madeline Martin

The Booklover's LibraryThe Booklover’s Library by Madeline Martin

Tracy’s Rating: 5 of 5 stars

Series: Standalone Title

Release Date: September 10, 2024

Life has never been easy for single mothers and their children, but late summer of 1939 was especially hard for young widow Emma Taylor and her daughter Olivia. With England on the brink of joining WWII, Emma is doing her best to provide for her child, but with her meager savings running low and prices rising, she is beginning to feel desperate. She would willingly work, but with a marriage bar prohibiting married women and widows with children from working most jobs, she is having a hard time finding a job that will enable her to earn a living, but still care for her daughter. Her luck seems to take a turn for the better when she happens to be in the right place at the right time – in this case, the café in Boot’s the Chemist store. She overhears a librarian resigning her position as she is to be married, and she takes the opportunity to ask about a position and is hired to work in the Boot’s Booklover’s Library – a Lending Library. But with war looming, even having a job, might not be enough to keep her daughter safe, decisions will have to be made about Olivia’s future, decisions that no parent wants to make. Keep your child close and potentially in harm’s way or send them away to live with strangers and hopefully away from air raids?

This story is a heartwarming and at times heartbreaking story of not only a woman struggling to keep her tiny family together during the war but rediscovering her own love of books and sharing that love with her daughter and the patrons of the lending library and maybe even finding a happy ending for herself. The story takes place at the start of England’s involvement in the war and gives the reader a glimpse of life in Nottingham during the terror of the blitz, as well as Emma’s volunteer efforts and her relationship with her young daughter, her friends, coworkers and library patrons. In addition to a fantastic story, fans of Ms. Martin’s novel, The Last Bookshop in London, will be delighted when Emma is sent to London and happens upon Primrose Hill Books and meets Grace and Mr. Evans. If you enjoy well-researched, emotional Homefront WWII fiction with relatable characters and literary references, then look no further, you have found your next read!

*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that I requested and was provided to me by the publisher/author. All opinions in this review are my own. *