By Sara Steven
July 4, 1918, Nashville, Tennessee. Even as the war in Germany drones on, patriotism swells at home. There are celebrations, music, and dancing. But for five men—one train engineer, one porter, one salesman, one farmer, and one thief—the world will soon take a terrible and tragic turn.
Summer, 1988. Ginny Campbell is a young woman unsure of her marriage and her future. Moving into a new house, she finds an old, abandoned trunk filled with carefully wrapped memorabilia, photos, and a woman’s name. Intrigued, she sets out to uncover the mystery of the steamer trunk, leading her on a sweeping journey of love and loss that stretches back to 1918.
Inspired by a true event. The great train wreck near Nashville on July 9, 1918, when two passenger trains collided due to human error, was a horrific disaster that killed over 100 people and injured hundreds more. The Great Forgotten is a gripping tale of five men whose lives were intertwined that fateful day and the ripple effect of this little-known American tragedy on the woman who knew them all. (Synopsis courtesy of Goodreads.)
I didn’t know about the great train wreck near Nashville, not until my experience with reading The Great Forgotten. I thought the use of history behind this event and creating a story around it was really clever and unique, and it showed in the two timelines that are portrayed for Anna Mae and Ginny. The story begins with an abandoned trunk that is found in Ginny’s home, giving her the opportunity to trace it to Anna Mae. From there, the two women forge a bond through memories and time, with Anna Mae recalling everything she can remember from 1918, and Ginny hanging on for every recollection.
The reader is right there with her. I love how invested Ginny is, and it was easy for me to feel that way, too, given all that happens for and to Anna Mae. 1918 was a tumultuous time given World War I, only amplified by the countdown of what’s to come, the inevitable tragedy. The story is told in various perspectives from characters who are based on people who were part of the great train wreck, feeling like a paid homage to the individuals who really went through it.
While Ginny is learning more about Anna Mae and the significance of the items within the trunk, she’s also dealing with some pretty life altering situations in her personal world. She isn’t sure of who she is, who she’ll be, or who she will be with, gaining a lot more insight while listening to the choices Anna Mae had made, even amidst dark times. Towards the end of the book, some of the questions Ginny had are finally answered, the reveals pretty shocking and some it had come as a complete surprise to me. But it all made sense and fit in well with the slow build up to the end.
Something I’ve always appreciated about a good story is how it doesn’t always have to end up as a happily-ever-after scenario; the best stories aren’t always buttoned up that way. Sometimes, it’s in not getting exactly what a character wanted that they end up discovering what they really needed, and I could see that a lot for Ginny. Anna Mae was proof of that, too. The Great Forgotten is a great re-telling of an event that many of us know little about, but after reading about it through the eyes of the main characters, we’ll all want to know more. It was a great five-star experience!
Thanks to K.L. Murphy for the book in exchange for an honest review.
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