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A Home for Alice
A Home for Alice
Oct 22, 2024 9:17 AM

Author:Gloria Cook

A Home for Alice

All she wants is a roof over her head...

After her plans to elope with her married lover fall through, Rachel Kivell is broken-hearted, and saddened that she must remain in her small Cornish mining town, with all of its dark secrets.

But her brooding is put to an end when the loving but childlike Alice Bowden turns up on her doorstep. Poor orphaned Alice has nowhere to go, but Rachel cannot see herself taking on the responsibilities of a child. Can she put her worries aside, or will Alice never find a place to call home?

Note: Previously published as All in a Day

Reviews

True love sometimes comes at a price. East Kent, 1830. Catherine Rook takes her peaceful life for granted. Her days are spent at the village school and lending a hand on her family’s farm. Life is run by the seasons, and there’s little time for worry. But rural unrest begins sweeping through Kent, and when Pa Rook buys a threshing machine it brings turbulence and tragedy to Wanstall Farm.

—— from the publisher's description

An intriguing tale of family relationships and of finding love a second time around . . . I’ll be sure to look out for the next book in the series.

—— Val Wood

An enthralling plotline with unexpected twists that will intrigue the reader until the last page.

—— Margaret Dickinson

I enjoyed reading Half a Sixpence and following the fortunes and tribulations of Catherine . . . It gave a very good sense of time and place and I hope it does really well for her.

—— Rosie Goodwin

What a treat. A Saga so refreshingly different from anything I have read before. A terrific story the reader will find impossible to put down . . . The tale that Evie tells us is fascinating, gripping, sad, happy, highly original and yes, you’ll find out all about that half sixpence.

—— Eileen Ramsay

A dazzling debut that reminded me of the Catherine Cookson books I have loved so much. Brilliant historical fiction that draws you in and does not let you go. Even better, this is the first book in a trilogy. We can’t wait until the next instalment

—— Frost Magazine

I absolutely loved, loved, loved reading Half A Sixpence and I can’t wait to read more from the pen of Evie Grace

—— Ginger Book Geek - 5*

Highly recommend to fans of novels in the saga or historical fiction genre.

—— Abby Bonny Book Reviews - 5*

A brilliant first novel

—— Mojo Mums blog

you’ll want to keep an eye out for the sequel, Her Mother’s Daughter, which is published in January 2018

—— Culture Fly

For all of The Golden House’s folkloric architecture and twinkling prose, for all its impish cartoonery and exuberant storytelling, the novel is at its heart an unsettling portrait of the state of humanity in the United States of 2017. It celebrates our meager glories and exposes our flaws, particularly our inability to see outside of our own little cocoons, whether they be constructed of silk or some coarser material.

—— Nathaniel Rich , New York Review of Books

His prose is just as often a pleasure, bursting with colour and texture… The result stands as Rushdie’s most vital book in years, and perhaps the first protest novel of the Trump era.

—— Stephen Phelan , Herald

A typically bold and all-encompassing saga.

—— Hilary A White , Irish Independent

Rushdie is, as ever, excellent in conveying bitter, personal anger.

—— DJ Taylor , Literary Review

Two decades after Rushdie transplanted himself to the US, one of the major pleasures of this novel is the way in which he considers the mores of the one per cent of the one per cent. Rushdie writes about the Goldens’ glittering, private world with innumerable perfect details, down to the art hanging on the walls… It will be a long four years, but fictional protests are unlikely to be as electric as this.

—— Olivia Cole , GQ

Hugely entertaining… Told against a backdrop of American politics and culture between Obama’s inauguration and the 2016 presidential election, it’s an extraordinarily powerful tale of our times.

—— Sue Price , Saga Magazine


[The Golden House] is a recognizably Rushdie novel in its playfulness, its verbal jousting, its audacious bravado, its unapologetic erudition, and its sheer, dazzling brilliance.

—— Boston Globe

The Golden House is a searing examination of modern America and the world around it since 2008… Through the density of his intermingling literary references, puzzles and (deliberately) fanciful plot, comes Rushdie's true success: His great ability to capture the devilish mood of post-crash greed, political upheaval, and the rejection of the cosmopolitan, liberal west.

—— Peter Carey , Belfast Telegraph Morning

Rushdie’s prose is beyond much reprieve—there are few contemporary artists who come to mind that possess his ability to craft sentences. In this regard, The Golden House, his latest novel, is no exception... The Golden House is a joy to read It’s hard to not have fun reading writing at Rushdie’s level of craftsmanship. It’s clever, intimidating, jocund, and electrifying.

—— Chicago Review of Books

The Golden House is not Brideshead or Gatsby – it is too rich and too riotous. Rather it is a modern Bonfire of the Vanities, New York seen from the inside and the outside, as only a writer of multiple selves such as Rushdie – Indian, British, now a New Yorker – could do.

—— Aminatta Forna , Guardian

Rushdie’s story is a morality tale which unfolds with great verve and erudition, missing no opportunity to pillory Donald Trump with its withering contempt.

—— Richard Hopton , Country & Town House

No-one spins a yarn like Rushdie, and The Golden House’s tale of bastard sons, mysterious men and submerged pasts is hugely enjoyable… To say The Golden House is 'only' hugely enjoyable is a little like writing 'only' on a cheque for £1 million.

—— Ross McIndoe , Skinny

Salman Rushdie has garaged the magic carpets and dived deep into 21st-century America, with its concerns about identity, guns, the 1 percent and even superheroes.

—— Jane Henderson , Miami Herald

It couldn't have been done better

—— Scotsman

A visceral reworking of Oresteia

—— Observer

The escalation of violence and desire for revenge has deliberate echoes of the Irish Troubles

—— Observer Books of the Year
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