A mystery – the theft of a precious book. A disappearance without a trace. Three women, three very different destinies, all entwined in time and circumstance.
Maria Eduarda, a mixed-race beauty born into the elite of Portuguese aristocracy, who is reaching adulthood during World War II, in neutral Portugal, in its capital – a melting pot for refugees, the displaced, spies, diplomats and opportunists.
Hertha, born into German farming stock, destined to endure the terrible privations of war as a young child.
Valeria, a child born of a much later generation, who brings the two together.
And a man, Gerald Neale, English diplomat, and spy, devastatingly handsome, fluent in Portuguese but a not-so-nice guy, the shadow behind Eduarda and Hertha.
Stars Maintain Their Glow is the story of two exceptional women whose lives were impacted by social conventions of the time, war and men’s privileges. Their story is gradually revealed through the words of Valeria – her promise to Hertha to complete the book that Hertha felt she could not.
My Review...
Regardless of affiliations or views, many European people struggled
greatly during World War 2. Often people’s experiences were very different. The
horrors of war touched everyone but those living in different social classes
might give you very different stories. Their picture would be a different type
of painting and when younger people view it, they see two stories, not just
one. That’s a skeleton of what Stars Maintain Their Glow is about, that
and much more.
This is a very long book. I am speaking of pages right now.
However, it seemed to take off slow for me which made it seem slower. But that
was truly at first. As I read, M G Da Mota began to shape her characters and
that, is truly what kept me reading to the end. This is historical fiction
giving the author quite a license to create but the author obviously researched
the information of the times, and I enjoyed looking various events up to learn
more about them. A quirk of mine maybe, but something that makes a book more
enjoyable.
So, in summary, a rather long, well researched book with great characters. Makes for a good read.
read an excerpt...
Gerald Neale arrived at the Portuguese capital in late June 1940 and was dazzled by the light, the luminous blue of the sky and the warmth of the sun. Young, irreverent, adventurous, and devastatingly handsome Gerald was a bit of a maverick. His father, Frank Neale, had been a cultural attaché to the British embassy in Lisbon for many years. Gerald and his two-year older brother Jonathan were born in Portugal but after their mother’s death, a few months after Gerald’s birth, they moved back to England where their father went to work for the government and never remarried.
Frank and his boys took with them a Portuguese nanny, a young woman with no family who had been raised in a convent but who didn’t feel a call to become a nun. Maria Filomena, her name, was happy to leave her country. She looked after the two boys until they were old enough to go to a prestigious public school in the Sussex Downs. After the boys went away to school, Mena, as they called her, married an English pub owner and moved with her husband to the town of Horsham, south of London in West Sussex, continuing to be in touch with the family. Both Jonathan and Gerald looked at her more like a mother than a nanny, as neither of them could remember their birth mother. With Mena, Gerald learned Portuguese and grew up bilingual. From his father he inherited the passion for old books and rare first editions. Frank owned a valuable, enviable collection of famous authors’ first editions, spanning centuries and different countries.
about M. G. da Mota...
M G da Mota is Margarida Mota-Bull’s pen name for fiction. She is a Portuguese-British novelist with a love for classical music, ballet and opera. Under her real name she also writes reviews of live concerts, CDs, DVDs and books for two classical music magazines on the web: MusicWeb International and Seen and Heard International. She is a member of the UK Society of Authors, speaks four languages and lives in Sussex with her husband. Her website, called flowingprose.com, contains photos and information.
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Video
trailer for STARS MAINTAIN THEIR GLOW:
Hello, I'm M G da Mota, author of Stars Maintain Their Glow. Thank you for reading the novel and for posting a good review.
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