Title: THAT DAY BY THE POOL
Author: GILES FRASER
ISBN: 9781836286097
Publisher: TROUBADOUR BOOKS
Pages: 369
Source: Review copy from the publisher
Blog Tour Organised by Random Things Tours
If something has been covered up for eighty years, someone, somewhere knows why…..
One cold January weekend in 2019, Nicole Weymouth and her fiancé, Dan, visit a boutique hotel in the Lake District. During the Second World War, it was a boarding school for young boys evacuated from London.
When a letter falls out of a book Nicole finds in the library, she discovers it was written in 1940 by an eight-year-old boy, Peter Slaithwaite, and he is asking his parents to bring him home because of the horrors he has experienced.
The letter was never sent.
Still traumatised by the memory of her younger brother’s death when she was a child, Nicole resolves to find out what led Peter to write the letter. The search she embarks upon takes her on a journey full of surprises and terrible consequences for her, her loved ones and all those involved in her investigations.
Official Summary
27 March 2026
Thank you to Anne Cater from Random Things Tours for including me in this blog tour. I always enjoy taking part and discovering new authors and stories.
That Day by the Pool by Giles Fraser centres around an intriguing premise: an old letter discovered inside a library book. Written by a young boy during the Second World War, it’s a desperate plea to be taken home from boarding school—a mystery that immediately draws both Nicole and the reader in.
I really enjoyed the historical thread of the story, particularly the emotional weight behind Peter’s letter and the unsettling glimpse into life at the wartime boarding school. The Lake District setting also adds a wonderfully atmospheric backdrop, and it’s easy to picture the quiet unease that lingers around the old hotel.
Nicole’s determination to uncover the truth gives the novel its momentum, and her personal history adds an extra layer of emotional depth. While there are several strands to her story—from family tragedy to her present-day relationships—these do highlight how the past can shape and influence the present in unexpected ways.
At times, I did find that there were quite a few plot threads and coincidences woven into the narrative, which made the story feel a little busy in places. However, readers who enjoy complex, layered storytelling may appreciate how all the different elements gradually come together.
This is an ambitious novel that blends historical mystery with contemporary drama. While it didn’t fully come together for me in every aspect, I appreciated the emotional core of the story and the intriguing mystery at its heart.
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About The Author
Author bio from the author’s site
Giles Fraser lives in Barnes, South-West London, with his wife Alex. He has three daughters and a granddaughter. He co-founded and runs the leading PR and communications agency Brands2Life. He studied creative writing under Richard Skinner at The Faber Academy. His first novel – LET’S FLY – was published in 2021.
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