A Family Matter
16.99 JOD
Description
An immersive and tender debut novel that tells the story of one family torn apart by secrets, prejudice and their own best intentions.It’s 2022, and Heron, an old man of quiet habits, has just had the sort of visit to the doctor that turns a life upside down. Sharing the diagnosis with Maggie, his only daughter, seems impossible. Heron just can’t find the words to tell her about it, or any of the other things he’s been protecting her from for so long.It’s 1982, and Dawn is a young wife and mother penned in by the expectations of her time and place. Then Hazel comes into her life like a torch in the dark. It’s the kind of connection that’s impossible to resist, and suddenly Dawn’s world is more joyful, and more complicated, than she ever expected. But Dawn has responsibilities, she has commitments: Dawn has Maggie.A Family Matter is an immersive and tender debut, at once heart-breaking and hopeful, that asks how we might heal from the wounds of the past, and what we might learn from them.
Additional information
Weight | 0.4 kg |
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Dimensions | 2.5 × 13.8 × 22.2 cm |
by | |
Format | Hardback |
Language | |
Pages | 208 |
Publisher | |
Year Published | 2025-5-15 |
Imprint | |
Publication City/Country | London, United Kingdom |
ISBN 10 | 1784745839 |
About The Author | Claire Lynch is a university lecturer and scholar of English and Irish literature. She is the author of Small: On Motherhoods. She lives in Windsor with her wife and three daughters. |
Review Quote | 'I was so moved and humbled by this beautifully crafted novel that I held it in my hands after finishing for a moment of thanks. In frank and straightforward prose, A Family Matter captures the heart-gripping consequences of forbidden love and reminds us that while the world is far from perfect there are among us decent people who are trying, little by little, to make it better.' |
Other text | I smiled. I cried. I raged. Claire Lynch has written an un-put-downable novel, and I want everyone to read it. Lynch takes part of our recent history of shame and stigma, and makes it real and beautiful and moving and challenging. Every page sings out with empathy and love, pain and honesty. And the writing – so precise, so deceptively simple, so beautiful in its tiny moments – makes the pages speed by. This book will make you look differently at the world.' |