Amelia Martin’s A Promise: A Sweeping Story of Friendship in WWII is a multi-perspective historical novel that follows several young lives as the war tightens around them. The narrative alternates between friends Elisabeth, Adam, and Hannah, which gives the story a broad, panoramic feel while keeping the emotional stakes personal.
The book’s strength is its steady, earnest pacing. It doesn’t rush the early relationships, and that patience makes the later losses and hard choices land with more weight. The tone is straightforward and sincere, focusing on loyalty, courage, and the quiet ways people try to hold on to hope.
I appreciated the way the story keeps returning to ordinary moments—family meals, work routines, small acts of kindness—because those contrasts make the historical darkness more tangible. The alternating viewpoints also help show how different people experience the same shifting world.
If I have a critique, it is that the prose can be simple and occasionally repetitive, and some chapters feel more like scene summaries than fully dramatized moments. Perhaps these are explained, at least in part, by the New Adult target audience, but I am uncertain. Still, the emotional core is strong and the story is easy to follow.
Without giving away any spoilers, let me just say that I was very pleasantly surprised with the final few chapters, which provided a beautiful ending to such a dark story.
I listened to the audiobook version, read by Dan Foster, and the narrator’s clear delivery helped keep the multiple perspectives distinct. It made the long, sweeping structure feel more cohesive.
If you enjoy WWII historical fiction with a strong friendship thread and a wide-angle view of the era, this is a heartfelt read.
