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'''Read [[:Category:Features|the latest features]].'''<!-- Remove -->
{{newreview
|title=The Life of Rebecca Jones
|author=Angharad Price
|rating=5
|genre=Biography
|summary=A newly-married couple make their way home from the chapel, riding on a horse-drawn cart as it winds its way round familiar country lanes towards the beautiful valley of Maesglasau. The horse pauses atop a hill and the valley spreads out before them: 'the vessel of their marriage'. The centuries-old stone farmhouse in the crook of the mountain is to be their homestead; a sturdy, silent witness to the tragedy and joy that is an intrinsic part of the fabric of family life.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>085738712X</amazonuk>
}}
 
{{newreview
|author=Elizabeth Haynes
|summary=Jen doesn’t have the happiest of families, so she’s immediately drawn to her husband Jason’s. Luckily they welcome her with open arms and she’s soon like a fourth child to Charles and Amelia. So when she discovers a secret that could tear lives apart, it’s as devastating to her as if it were her own parents. She has a choice to make: share the burden and ruin relationships in the process, or keep it to herself and shoulder it all alone.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0141047267</amazonuk>
}}
 
{{newreview
|title=Steaming to Victory: How Britain's Railways Won the War
|author=Michael Williams
|rating=4.5
|genre=History
|summary=Soon after the end of the First World War, the British railways entered what is generally regarded as their golden age, with the heyday of the ‘Big Four’ companies, the LNER (London and North Eastern), LMS (London, Midlands and Scottish), GWR (Great Western) and Southern Railways. By 1939 they were beginning to lose their virtual monopoly of land-based transport to lorries, buses and coaches. Nevertheless, as war became increasingly inevitable, they played a vital part in the preparation to keep the country moving, keeping industry and the war effort supplied, helping in the evacuation of Dunkirk, or as their press office put it in a pamphlet of 1943, 'tackling the biggest job in transport history'.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099557673</amazonuk>
}}

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