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Reviewed by Jack Magnus for Readers' Favorite
The Last Season is an historical novel written by Robert Joseph. Lady Mary Ashmore's fancy has been set on Lord Andrew Buckford, the eldest son and heir of Lord Simon Buckford, for as long as she can remember. She's not at all pleased to hear the rumors about his burgeoning relationship with her German tutor, Ruth Herzog. Ruth is illegally in England, and she’s quite understandably terrified of being sent back to Germany where Hitler has already begun rounding up Jews, taking their possessions, and sending them to labor camps. Ruth is treated as household staff by Mary’s mother, Lady Celia Ashmore, when she's not engaged in tutoring Mary. When Andrew impulsively invites her to join the other guests at the Ashmores’ formal dinner in the place of an absent guest, both Celia and Mary are affronted by what seems to be a slight and an impropriety. Ruth is staff, and besides, she's a Jew. Andrew's mother, Antonia, is also concerned about the relationship, as both she and Celia had expected Andrew and Mary to marry one day, and Ruth just doesn’t seem suitable. The two mothers decide that prompt action is necessary and agree that discharging Ruth and sending her back to Germany will resolve the situation painlessly and efficiently. Neither of them really believes that the situation in Germany is quite as bad as some would say, and it would, after all, be for the best.
Robert Joseph's historical novel, The Last Season, is set in the opening days of World War II, and the season the title refers to is eighteen-year-old Mary's season as a debutante, a season filled with gala dances, parties, Ascot races, and the like. Even as the aristocratic families plan for their daughters' coming out festivities, the harsh realities of Hitler's campaigns and the plight of the German Jews inevitably seeps into even the most well-bred conversations. Mary Ashmore, Joseph's main character in this historical novel, comes of age in the story, and watching as she finds out there's more to life than the sheltered existence she's enjoyed makes this tale work so well. I was transfixed as the events that unfold during Mary's visit to her German relatives challenge all her preconceived notions, and cheered her on as she faced her fears and accepted the responsibility for her actions. This book brims with scenes of genteel British country life juxtaposed with the growing unrest over the German threat and the horrors being imposed upon anyone labelled as different in Hitler's Germany. The Last Season is a finely plotted, suspenseful, and altogether worthy addition to the ranks of historical novels based on the Second World War, and it's most highly recommended.