Review, The Whistle Stop Canteen by Barb Warner Deane

Earlier this year I was fortunate enough to recieve an ARC of the historical novel The Whistle Stop Canteen by Barb Warner Deane through Netgalley. I read it shortly afterwards and today I'll post my review.

Description from Netgalley
A wartime train station encounter changes a lifetime...After losing her fiancé in WW1, Margaret Parker settled into a quiet, lonely life as the town librarian in North Platte, NE. After the US enters WW2, Margaret volunteers as the historian for the Servicemen’s Canteen organized by the women of North Platte. When Captain Tom Carver strolls into the Canteen, he’s immediately drawn to Maggie and works hard to woo her, via letters, as he heads off to war. While reluctantly falling in love long-distance, Maggie also opens her heart to the teen-aged girl she supervises and the townswomen working beside her, while fearing for the lives of the servicemen and women she meets at the Canteen. When Tom springs a surprise on her, and then winds up MIA, Maggie must come to grips with her fear of another loss. Relying on her new family and friends, she must take a chance on love, if she wants to make a life for herself after the war is over.

My Thoughts on the Book
The Whistle Stop Canteen was a wholesome, heartwarming and enjoyable read. One gets to know Maggie and Rose quite a bit, as well as a couple of the soldiers. What made it more fun to read, was the introduction from the author with some history of the original Canteen, how it started and so on.

It made a difference, that the book was based on a real event and a real place, even if the story and characters were fictional.

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