These Days
“Adroit, precise storytelling, atmospheric and satisfying; These Days is a novel of real substance.” —Hilary Mantel, Booker Prize-winning author of Wolf Hall

WINNER OF THE WALTER SCOTT PRIZE FOR HISTORICAL FICTION 2023


One of Lit Hub’s and Zibby Owens’s Most Anticipated Books of 2025 • One of The Washington Post's 10 Noteworthy Books of April 2025 • One of NPR's Best Books of 2025


An “exquisitely lyrical” (Louise Kennedy) WWII novel from a singular Irish writer following two sisters over the course of four nights as they reckon with their futures in crumbling Belfast.


April 1941: Belfast has escaped the worst of the Second World War—so far. Over the next two months, it will be so destroyed from above that people will say, in horror, “My God, Belfast is finished.” Many won’t make it through, and those who do will be forever changed.

Living amid the rubble are sisters Emma and Audrey. One is engaged to be married; the other is in a secret relationship with another woman. As the bombs fall, and tomorrow feels further and further away, these young women must grapple with the cultural expectations standing firm around them, and try to seize control of their destinies. After all, Emma thinks, if one is to survive, one must survive for something.

Featuring the voices of the community—from their mother to the wee girl down the road—These Days is a timeless and poignant tale of interrupted girlhood, life under duress, and the struggle to stay true to ourselves. Winner of the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, Lucy Caldwell’s portrait of the Belfast Blitz is to be cherished.

“What a visceral, powerful, authentic novel! It’s hard to believe Lucy Caldwell didn’t actually live through the Belfast Blitz, it’s so accurately depicted. I felt I was there with the bombs, the blood, the chaos, the fear, and the resilience.” —Tracy Chevalier, New York Times bestselling author of Girl With A Pearl Earring
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These Days
“Adroit, precise storytelling, atmospheric and satisfying; These Days is a novel of real substance.” —Hilary Mantel, Booker Prize-winning author of Wolf Hall

WINNER OF THE WALTER SCOTT PRIZE FOR HISTORICAL FICTION 2023


One of Lit Hub’s and Zibby Owens’s Most Anticipated Books of 2025 • One of The Washington Post's 10 Noteworthy Books of April 2025 • One of NPR's Best Books of 2025


An “exquisitely lyrical” (Louise Kennedy) WWII novel from a singular Irish writer following two sisters over the course of four nights as they reckon with their futures in crumbling Belfast.


April 1941: Belfast has escaped the worst of the Second World War—so far. Over the next two months, it will be so destroyed from above that people will say, in horror, “My God, Belfast is finished.” Many won’t make it through, and those who do will be forever changed.

Living amid the rubble are sisters Emma and Audrey. One is engaged to be married; the other is in a secret relationship with another woman. As the bombs fall, and tomorrow feels further and further away, these young women must grapple with the cultural expectations standing firm around them, and try to seize control of their destinies. After all, Emma thinks, if one is to survive, one must survive for something.

Featuring the voices of the community—from their mother to the wee girl down the road—These Days is a timeless and poignant tale of interrupted girlhood, life under duress, and the struggle to stay true to ourselves. Winner of the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, Lucy Caldwell’s portrait of the Belfast Blitz is to be cherished.

“What a visceral, powerful, authentic novel! It’s hard to believe Lucy Caldwell didn’t actually live through the Belfast Blitz, it’s so accurately depicted. I felt I was there with the bombs, the blood, the chaos, the fear, and the resilience.” —Tracy Chevalier, New York Times bestselling author of Girl With A Pearl Earring
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These Days

These Days

by Lucy Caldwell

Narrated by Lisa Dwyer Hogg

Unabridged — 7 hours, 59 minutes

These Days

These Days

by Lucy Caldwell

Narrated by Lisa Dwyer Hogg

Unabridged — 7 hours, 59 minutes

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Overview

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As the Belfast Blitz blazes through their city, two sisters have to decide whether to conform to societal ideals or follow their hearts. This WWII historical fiction takes you beyond Ireland's green pastures and endless meadows.

“Adroit, precise storytelling, atmospheric and satisfying; These Days is a novel of real substance.” —Hilary Mantel, Booker Prize-winning author of Wolf Hall

WINNER OF THE WALTER SCOTT PRIZE FOR HISTORICAL FICTION 2023


One of Lit Hub’s and Zibby Owens’s Most Anticipated Books of 2025 • One of The Washington Post's 10 Noteworthy Books of April 2025 • One of NPR's Best Books of 2025


An “exquisitely lyrical” (Louise Kennedy) WWII novel from a singular Irish writer following two sisters over the course of four nights as they reckon with their futures in crumbling Belfast.


April 1941: Belfast has escaped the worst of the Second World War—so far. Over the next two months, it will be so destroyed from above that people will say, in horror, “My God, Belfast is finished.” Many won’t make it through, and those who do will be forever changed.

Living amid the rubble are sisters Emma and Audrey. One is engaged to be married; the other is in a secret relationship with another woman. As the bombs fall, and tomorrow feels further and further away, these young women must grapple with the cultural expectations standing firm around them, and try to seize control of their destinies. After all, Emma thinks, if one is to survive, one must survive for something.

Featuring the voices of the community—from their mother to the wee girl down the road—These Days is a timeless and poignant tale of interrupted girlhood, life under duress, and the struggle to stay true to ourselves. Winner of the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, Lucy Caldwell’s portrait of the Belfast Blitz is to be cherished.

“What a visceral, powerful, authentic novel! It’s hard to believe Lucy Caldwell didn’t actually live through the Belfast Blitz, it’s so accurately depicted. I felt I was there with the bombs, the blood, the chaos, the fear, and the resilience.” —Tracy Chevalier, New York Times bestselling author of Girl With A Pearl Earring

Editorial Reviews

Kirkus Reviews

2025-03-08
One Belfast family’s experience of the intense bombing raids of World War II becomes a lens through which to witness the whole city’s trauma and grief.

Philip Bell, a doctor, and his wife, Florence, live a comfortable middle-class existence in the Northern Ireland capital with their two adult daughters, Emma and Audrey, and younger son, Paul. But in the spring of 1941, they, like so many, endured the Belfast Blitz, a sequence of intensely destructive German bombing attacks that included, on one single night, the dropping of 100,000 incendiary devices. Caldwell uses the Bells’ joint and individual perspectives to depict many facets of these events. Audrey, newly engaged to Richard Graham, helps a 6-year-old child reunite with her family. Emma, a First Aid volunteer, survives a close impact but also suffers a terrible loss. Philip is fundamentally shaken by what he witnesses at the hospital. And later, among scenes of tremendous destruction, with uncounted numbers missing and presumed dead, Florence realizes Paul must be evacuated out of the city for his own safety. Around them, Caldwell introduces a lesser population of associated characters, widening the story’s scope to include black market smugglers, children, co-workers, and more. There’s a documentary quality to this broad, fact-driven panorama which lends detail and texture, although it also slows the storytelling. Emma (“kind, stubborn, awkward”), Audrey (“flighty, impulsive, earnest”), and Florence—haunted by a long-lost love—emerge most strongly, their differing perspectives lending emotional depth. The figures around them often seem less fully imagined. Similarly, Caldwell creates some moments of piercing self-knowledge or realization for her characters in contrast with other, more predictable scenes. But overall, her efforts to capture the literally earth-shaking experience of such a violent and terrifying overthrow of normality are effective, affecting, and achieved with sincerity.

A hardworking elegy for a city’s devastation.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940195181437
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 04/08/2025
Edition description: Unabridged
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