We have updated our Privacy Policy Please take a moment to review it. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms of our updated Privacy Policy.

ebook / ISBN-13: 9781472205278

Price: £4.99

ON SALE: 29th August 2013

Genre: Fiction & Related Items

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

A chance moment of passion changes more than one life…

Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree is a captivating wartime saga of new beginnings and an impossible love, from much-loved author Margaret Thornton. Perfect for fans of Pam Evans and Dilly Court.


‘Exquisite’ – North Wales Chronicle

Blackpool, 1940. Although the War means uncertainty and anxiety for some, Eunice Morton is grateful for the opportunities it provides her with. She volunteers for the Women’s Land Army and is sent to help on a farm in Gloucestershire. Milking the cows and working in the fields are a far cry from the domestic routine that she is used to, but Eunice enjoys her work and her newfound independence.

Meanwhile, her relationship with her childhood friend Ronnie looks set to turn into something more romantic, but Eunice still isn’t sure that Ronnie is the one for her. Then she befriends Heinrich Muller, a German POW sent to work on the farm, and an elicit moment of passion changes her life forever…

What readers are saying about Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree:

Warm and believable (i.e. fallible) characters, and a great story line!

‘Margaret Thornton is a brilliant storyteller. Her books draw you in, so you feel you know the characters. Hard to put down

Five stars

What's Inside

Read More Read Less

Reviews

Exquisite
North Wales Chronicle
A fine romance
Belfast Telegraph
Her fans will love it, and it deserves to make fans of new readers
West Lancashire Evening Gazette
A lovely book to read by the fireside on dark, long nights
Herald Express
[A] compulsive page turner
Coventry Evening Telegraph
A brilliant read
Woman's Realm
A smashing holiday read
Lancashire Evening Telegraph