The Saint of Lost Things: A Guardian Summer Read

9.99 JOD

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Description

FROM THE WINNER OF THE AUTHORS’ CLUB BEST FIRST NOVEL AWARD 2022’Reading The Saint of Lost Things was one of those perfect reading experiences that come along very occasionally; it’s moving, funny, tragic, triumphant, totally gripping, a pure gift of a novel’ DONAL RYAN’Superb’ FINANCIAL TIMES’You’ll be moved, you might laugh and there may well be redemption’ EVENING STANDARD’Thoroughly absorbing’ GUARDIANLindy Morris is stuck. She lives in rural Ireland, banished to a lonely bungalow by her Granda Morris, with only her Auntie Bell and the TV for company.But one day Lindy realises that life is not quite what she thought it was: her mother’s disappearance and her own lost years need to be brought out into the light. Suddenly Lindy is awake, uncovering the very secrets that will release her from her past.Told with devastating wit and poignancy, THE SAINT OF LOST THINGS is the triumphant story of an unlikely heroine as she makes her bid for freedom.

Additional information

Weight 0.3 kg
Dimensions 3.6 × 13 × 19.6 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

448

Publisher

Year Published

2023-4-20

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

1529158680

About The Author

Tish Delaney was born and brought up in Northern Ireland at the height of the Troubles. Like a lot of people of her generation, she left the sectarian violence behind by moving to England. After graduating from Manchester University, she moved to London and worked on various magazines and broadsheets as a reporter, reviewer and sub-editor. She left the Financial Times in 2014 to live in the Channel Islands to pursue her career as a writer. Before My Actual Heart Breaks, her debut novel, was published by Hutchinson Heinemann in 2021.

Review Quote

Tish Delaney's first novel, Before My Actual Heart Breaks, suggested that she was an author of rare promise and acuity. This follow-up confirms her as one of the most arresting voices of her generation. The tale of an aunt and niece living in uncomfortable proximity and mutual antagonism with each other in rural Donegal, it combines deep psychological insight with unexpected touches of lightness and humour. Delaney never succumbs to cliche, but creates a vividly realised narrative in which you long for her characters to break free and triumph

Other text

Reading The Saint of Lost Things was one of those perfect reading experiences that come along very occasionally; it's moving, funny, tragic, triumphant, totally gripping, a pure gift of a novel