★ 01/09/2023
A young’s woman’s family loyalties are divided as she leaves her London home for Boston during WWII in Spence-Ash’s magnetic debut. In 1940, 11-year-old Bea Thompson’s parents take advantage of a short-lived program to keep British children out of harm’s way during the war, and ship her to America. Bea stays in Boston with the wealthy Gregorys and quickly becomes part of their family, which includes sons 13-year-old William and nine-year-old Gerald. Nancy Gregory treats Bea as the daughter she never had, while her husband, Ethan, sees Bea as a welcome addition to the household, despite his austere manner. Bea learns how to swim at the Gregorys’ island house in Maine, excels academically, and, as a teen, falls for the handsome but mercurial William. At the end of the war, Bea returns to a London transformed by bombings and copes with the absence of her father, who died from a heart attack. Torn by her dedication to the Gregorys, she tries to acclimate to life in London with her mother and new stepfather, and after finishing school and finding work as a teacher, Bea’s surprised by a visit from William. The author’s choice to highlight an obscure corner of history with the overseas program adds a note of poignancy to Bea’s story, as her voyage took place shortly before two other ships were sunk by the Germans. As well, Spence-Ash generates a stronger emotional charge with her contrasting portrayals of the two families, whose cultural and economic differences make it difficult for Bea to find her own way. Readers will be riveted. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman Literary Agency. (Mar.)
"The plot of Laura Spence-Ash’s Beyond That, the Sea is rooted in the home-front upheavals of World War II, but it’s also a timeless exploration of what it means to create a family, of how dreams can die and be reborn in surprising ways."
–The New York Times Book Review
"A young’s woman’s family loyalties are divided as she leaves her London home for Boston during WWII in Spence-Ash’s magnetic debut... Readers will be riveted."
—Publishers Weekly, STARRED Review
"Beyond That, the Sea is a lovely, addictive novel. I was absorbed by the interesting premise—an eleven year old girl arrives to live, temporarily, with a new family—and by the myriad love stories that change and deepen over the decades the novel covers. Laura Spence-Ash has written a gorgeous novel filled with wonderful characters."
—Ann Napolitano, bestselling author of Dear Edward and Hello Beautiful, an Oprah Book Club Pick
"Beyond That, the Sea is a shimmering dive into a lost past. With deft, beautiful prose, Laura Spence-Ash brings us into the worlds—both inner and outer—of two families in wartime, and over the years that follow. This novel is as haunting as it is accomplished."
—Meg Wolitzer, The New York Times bestselling author of The Female Persuasion
"This gorgeous novel, about the profound impact on children and families of even the most benign forms of displacement, marks the debut of a very gifted writer. I adored Laura Spence-Ash's characters and deeply admired her precise, resonant prose. Beyond That, the Sea is a marvel."
—Ann Packer, author of The Dive from Clausen’s Pier and The Children’s Crusade
"In this beautiful novel, Laura Spence-Ash renders the last century with painterly precision. Beyond That, the Sea tells the story of a British girl taken in by a prosperous New England family in the Second World War, and of the legacy of the intimate relationships that ensue—a story as rich and vital as life."
—Claire Messud, bestselling author of The Emperor's Children and The Woman Upstairs
"I was utterly captivated by this beautiful story from the first page to the last. The characters are so real, their feelings so well portrayed that I had to keep reminding myself that I don’t actually know them. But I do! And I will return to the book to experience the well-wrought details of these lives again. This is a new favorite novel, and I can only hope Laura Spence-Ash has more coming soon."
—Alice Elliott Dark, author of Fellowship Point and In the Gloaming
"In this exquisite novel, Laura Spence-Ash weaves a beautiful mosaic of voices, each a perfect postcard exploring home, love, loss and belonging that will entrance readers until the final, heartwarming page."
—Hannah Tinti, author of The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley and The Good Thief
"What a wonderful novel! I loved Beatrix as a girl, discovering America, and perhaps even more as a young woman, back in post-war London. Spence-Ash writes with such insight about her characters on both sides of the Atlantic and she is a mistress of suspense. I was deeply sorry to reach the last page."
—Margot Livesey, author of The Boy in the Field
"Readers will feel the pull of new fictional friends from the first to the last page, and long afterward....[in] this outstanding debut novelist's portrayal of her characters. Spence-Ash's first novel will appeal to fans of Pam Jenoff, Margot Livesey, and Ann Packer."
—Booklist
"Quietly stunning, with finely drawn characters and vivid descriptions, Beyond That, the Sea is a gorgeous, elegiac, novel about loss, family and the complexity of love."
—Shelf Awareness
Beautifully written and narrated, this audiobook presents two families who are impacted by war. As WWII begins, 11-year-old Beatrix Thompson's parents send her from London to live with a family in Boston. Though she misses her parents, Bea spends several years with the Gregorys and settles in as part of the family. When the war ends, she returns to London and her parents, but a part of her remains with the Gregorys. Ell Potter's narration spans countries and decades as the story follows Bea and her connection to two families and two very different lives. Potter creates believable distinctions between well- developed characters of different ages from different locales. Listeners will be captivated by this compelling story. K.S.M. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
2023-01-12
Domestic worlds collide when an 11-year-old evacuated from England to the United States during World War II is absorbed into a new family, reconfiguring both its equilibrium and her own.
Spence-Ash’s debut takes a multiperspective approach to one minor wartime decision that impacts multiple lives across time and place—from the 1940s to the 1970s in London, Boston, and on a magical island off the coast of Maine. The last is where the Gregory family spends each summer, as Beatrix Thompson will learn to do too, during the five years, from 1940 to '45, she spends with the Gregorys: parents Ethan and Nancy, sons William and Gerald. Back in Blitz-stricken London, her parents, Reginald and Millie, miss Bea intensely and argue about the wisdom of Reginald’s insistence on her departure. Reginald is a factory worker with “no money in savings at all,” while the Gregorys are “house-rich and dollar poor,” Ethan employed as a teacher. The class divide is just one element to which Beatrix must adapt, but as the daughter Nancy always wanted and a treasured companion to both boys, her new role develops into a positive, enlarging experience for all parties in America. After the war and Beatrix’s return to England, her relationship with the Gregorys begins to drift. And, with the novel's decade-spanning timeline and episodic structure, so does Spence-Ash’s plot momentum. Postwar relationships, children, and deaths occur, accompanied by glimpses of tenderness and connection, but there’s also a hollow restlessness to the narrative, compounded by the sketchiness of some characters, including a major one who disappears without much impact. It’s the women who emerge most vividly from this delicate yet porous story that eventually yields to a predictable conclusion.
A circuitous but sensitive novel from an author to watch.