

With WWII on the horizon, Ruth’s husband is offered a job at the Springfield Armory.Life is great. Ruth has always resented the attention Millie garnered and so when she married, she was happy to get away from her sister. Ruth and Millie have never been close–not as toddlers sharing a bedroom in their Brooklyn apartment, not as teenagers navigating suitors and school(Ruth was the homely but smart sister and Millie the less-studious gorgeous sister), and certainly not as mothers with young children of their own. Ruth has always been the ‘responsible older sister’ who had to shoulder the burden of many of life’s struggles while Millie was doted upon and wanted by everyone. Told in alternating POVs with distinct places and time periods (1930s Brooklyn 1940s Springfield, MA), the voices truly sing. Martin’s Press, Jan 22 2019) and it’s every bit as good–if not better–than her first.This is a mesmerizing tale of sisterhood, lies, betrayal, rivalries, motherhood, withheld communication, even religion. Now, Lynda returns with her second novel, THE WARTIME SISTERS (St. Loigman’s debut, THE TWO-FAMILY HOUSE (2016), and was delighted to see that she chose to continue her writing journey into historical fiction she truly shines when exploring complicated familial relationships, and it makes for such authentic writing. Captivating and stunning examination of family dysfunction, disharmony, sisterhood, and WWII in Lynda Cohen Loigman’s THE WARTIME SISTERS.
