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A rags to riches story of family secrets set in post-war Ireland.
About the author
The Rt Hon.
Nadine Dorries grew up in a working-class family in Liverpool. She spent part of her childhood living on a farm with her grandmother, and attended school in a small remote village in the west of Ireland. She trained as a nurse, then followed with a successful career in which she established and then sold her own business. She is an MP, presently serving as Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, and has three daughters.
The Rt Hon.
Nadine Dorries grew up in a working-class family in Liverpool. She spent part of her childhood living on a farm with her grandmother, and attended school in a small remote village in the west of Ireland. She trained as a nurse, then followed with a successful career in which she established and then sold her own business. She has been MP for Mid Bedfordshire since 2005, and previously served as Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. She has three daughters, and is based in Gloucestershire.
Summary
'As heart-warming as it is heartbreaking, this novel is unputdownable' Sunday Express.
Tarabeg is a small village on the West Coast of Ireland. In the aftermath of the Second World War,
two women are waiting there
for ambitious Michael Malone to return home.
Rosie is the local schoolteacher and most people think she is promised to him. Just a few have guessed that
he has secretly begun to woo Sarah, whose brutal fisherman father would kill her if he knew.
Both Rosie and Sarah love Michael, both hope to become his wife and their lives will interweave in
a tale of tangled secrets, old promises and new feuds. Michael Malone's choice will have
fateful consequences for everyone – especially, in due course, for his young daughter.
This is the first in a new sequence of novels with a brilliant cast of characters and a story that will lead to Liverpool in
Mary Kate and back to Ireland in
The Velvet Ribbon.
Foreword
A rags-to-riches story of family secrets, set in post-war Ireland from the Sunday Times bestseller Nadine Dorries. 'Dorries knows what people want' Mail on Sunday.
Additional text
PRAISE FOR NADINE DORRIES:
'A riveting tale packed full of history, love and deceit' OK! Magazine.
'A funny and sometimes shocking saga. I couldn't put it down' Cristina Odone.
'Angela's Ashes with a scouse accent' Irish Times.
'Captivating, phenomenal and touching' 23 Review Street.
'A multi-layered book [with] gorgeous sentences and sensational plotlines' With Love For Books.