Interview with Lily Graham

The Only Light in London
Lily Graham
Bookouture Pub
Feb 20 th , 2024
The Only Light in London by Lily Graham is a heart wrenching story. It delves with loneliness,
love, endurance and compassion.
The plot has a Jewish journalist, Sebastien, in Germany, needing to escape to London before he
is captured. He must leave behind his sister and parents, hoping that they will join him soon.
Alone and grieving his family left behind, he joins a local amateur dramatics group. When
Sebastien enters the meeting place, he hesitates and plans to only stay for cookies and leave.
But once meeting the host, Finley, he changes his mind. A friendship and eventually a romance
blossom, especially after he becomes a lodger in her mother’s house.
Through each of the character’s eyes and thoughts, readers understand the terror, sadness, and
hope that each seeks. A powerful quote by Sebastien’s sister, Katrin, reflects her feelings,
““They don’t have the right to make me feel I’m worth less than them just because I’m a Jew.”
This is a wonderful novel that will grab at readers’ emotions. At times it is heart-rending with all
the pain and suffering, worry and despair, but there is also a hopeful ending showing the
resilience of the characters.
Elise Cooper: How did you come up for the story idea?
Lily Graham: I got the idea during lockdown in the UK of 2020. We were told what was
essential and what was not. All these theatres were shut down. Everything that
enriched our lives was shut down including bookstores. I started thinking about what
happened during WWII. I came up with my main character, Finley, who was an aspiring
actress. She suddenly had a captive audience in the underground shelters.
EC: Was that based on something that really happened?
LG: I came across ads of that time. They were looking for actors, musicians, and
others who could entertain people while they were taking shelter down below. From
there the story deepened. I visited some of the shelters in my home turf. I walked down
the streets and even placed Finley’s little theatre, The Glory, between two fictional
cellars.
EC: Why only the two years of 1939 and 1940?
LG: I read this remarkable book, a true non-fiction diary, that described what her life
was like in England during those years. I wanted to get across how they felt when war
was declared and what it was like during the German Blitzkrieg. The idea of keeping

calm and carry on, yet there was so much terror. This included needed to recognize
certain bombs. The main reason I wanted to set the story then is because a lot of the
Blitz happened in 1940.
EC: Did people really remain calm?
LG: People did have that stiff upper lip to carry on. Another diary I read started out with
the woman being terrified at the start of the war, but three years later she watched the
bombs being dropped. It was the spirit that they were not going to give in to the
Gerries.
EC: How would you describe Finley?
LG: She is warm, sunny, loyal, a dreamer, funny, feisty, and looked on the brighter side.
EC: How would you describe Sebastien?
LG: He is lonely, caring, determined, and felt powerless.
EC: What about the relationship between Finley and Sebastien?
LG: They were affectionate toward each other. At first, they were friends, trying to avoid
going beyond it. She seemed to not understand why he was willing to join the armed
forces when he was now free. Finley also felt she was following in her mother’s
footsteps, when her dad was killed after enlisting during WWI. Sebastien felt some sort
of power in enlisting, wanting to finally do something to fight the injustice.
EC: Why the quote, “I can’t understand why any of the normal Germans are going
along with it?”
LG: I read a diary about a young girl in Nazi Germany giving an account of being raised
as a youth in Nazi Germany. Why did so many go along with it? I think we will always
ask these questions. I wanted to show what the Germans did to their own Jewish
citizens. This included making them sell their assets, invalidating passports so they
could not leave the country, sending them to camps, and the Nuremberg Laws that
prevented them from working and owning anything. Jews were scapegoated.
EC: Does Katrin, Sebastien’s sister, represent what the Germans did to the Jews?
LG: She was a younger Jewish person in Germany who became withdrawn and quiet.
She had an inquiring mind but also had survivor’s guilt and nightmares. She finally
escaped to England to join her brother. She was haunted by what happened.
EC: Why did the English take away Sebastien’s mom until after an inquest
considering she was a Jewish refugee?

LG: This really happened. There was a sense that there were a lot of spies with people
pretending to be who they were not. This did happen. Some German Nazis did pretend
to be victims after they supposedly escaped. There was a mass outcry how they could
take Jews and victimize them all over again. Plus, they were housed with actual Nazis
while being investigated.
EC: Your next book?
LG: It is set in England and France, featuring a lady pilot during WWII. The female pilots
ferried the planes. The working title is The Forgotten Hours and will be out this time next
year.
THANK YOU!!