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Mersey Girl
Mersey Girl
Oct 22, 2024 11:26 PM

Author:June Francis

Mersey Girl

Happiness always comes at a cost...

Having grown up in a convent after the death of her mother, Lizzie Knight has never known what it’s like to have a real family. So when a strange woman turns up with promises of a new life in Liverpool, she is thrilled.

Warm-hearted and kind, Phyl is everything she wants in a stepmother. But then Lizzie falls in love with the one man who should have been out of bounds. Should she follow her heart and risk losing it all?

From the author of A Sister’s Duty and Lily’s War

(Note: previously published as Going Home to Liverpool)

Reviews

Fifteen-year-old twins Maisy and Duncan Mitcham have always had each other. Until the fateful day in the wood . . .

—— from the publisher's description

A real page-turner, a family story that is multi-layered just as you'd expect from Lesley Pearse, who is deservedly one of the world's favourite story tellers

—— My Weekly

A gripping new novel

—— HELLO! Magazine

Praise for Lesley Pearse

—— -

Heart-warming and evocative, a real delight to read

—— Sun

A narrative that gallops along, this is quintessential Pearse that will delight her army of readers

—— Daily Mail

Glorious, heartwarming

—— Woman & Home

Evocative, compelling, told from the heart

—— Sunday Express

I just could not put it down

—— Ginger Book Geek

Ellie Dean is such a fabulous storyteller. She never fails to deliver and I greatly Look forward to the next instalment.

—— Mojo Mums

[White Teeth] established a model for how to make sense-and art-out of the complexity, diversity and pluck that have defined the beginning of this century

—— Time

A dramatic, intimate chronicle of a family implosion set in unsettling times

—— Publishers' Weekly

If there is a more brilliant writer than Tóibín working today, I don't know who that would be

—— Karen Joy Fowler

This is a novel about the way the members of a family keep secrets from one another, tell lies and make mistakes.. .

—— Literary Review

Tóibín's retelling is governed by compassion and responsibility, and focuses on the horrors that led Clytemnestra to her terrible vengeance. Her sympathetic first-person narrative makes even murder, for a moment, seem reasonable (...) Tóibín's prose is precise and unadorned, the novel's moments of violence told with brutal simplicity. But its greatest achievement is as a page-turner. In a tale that has ended the same way for thousands of years, Tóibín makes us hope for a different outcome

—— The Economist

[An] intense, thought-provoking and original novel . . . Toibin's book transforms this ancient story into a lyrical, melancholy meditation on closeted desire, which implicitly comments on the aftermath of the Irish Troubles'

—— Emily Wilson , TLS

Graphic, vicious, beautiful retelling of ancient myths.... Ultimately the book is a stark, timeless and brilliantly rendered tale of power in a world, as ever, riven by conflict.

—— 'I' Newspaper

In a novel describing one of the Western world's oldest legends, in which the gods are conspicuous by their absence, Tóibín achieves a paradoxical richness of characterisation and a humanisation of the mythological, marking House Of Names as the superbly realised work of an author at the top of his game.

—— Daily Express

A spellbinding adaptation of the Clytemnestra myth, House of Names considers the Mycenaen queen in all her guises: grieving mother, seductress, ruthless leader - and victim of the ultimate betrayal.

—— Vogue

A haunting story, largely because Tóibín tells it in spare, resonant prose...

—— Lucy Hughes-Hallett , New Statesman

A Greek House of Cards... Just like Heaney at the end of his Mycenae lookout, Toibin's novel augurs an era of renewal that comes directly from the cessation of hostilities.

—— Fiona Macintosh , Irish Times

The book's mastery of pacing and tone affirm the writer as one of our finest at work today.

—— John Boland , Irish Independent

A daring, and triumphant return, to the Oresteia... bleakly beautiful twilight of the Gods.

—— Boyd Tonkin , The Arts Desk

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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