The Tune of Heart is a work of historical literary fiction set in interwar England, where fog-laden streets, rigid social order, and quiet faith shape the lives of ordinary people on the edge of change. The story follows Albert, a young man from a working-class household marked by illness and loss, and Sophia, a young woman raised in comfort and expectation, whose worlds briefly intersect amid floods, economic strain, and the distant murmur of approaching war.
Through restrained prose and intimate moments rather than dramatic upheaval, the narrative explores conscience, dignity, and moral awakening. Class is neither glorified nor condemned, but examined through the lens of human responsibility and compassion. Christian imagery and values—humility, endurance, and the primacy of the heart over status—form an ethical undercurrent without becoming sermon or doctrine.
Quietly reflective and culturally rooted in 1930s England, The Tune of Heart is a story about inner transformation rather than rebellion, about endurance rather than triumph, and about how genuine moral clarity often emerges not in moments of power, but in stillness, loss, and human connection.
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