The Transatlantic book club A novel

Felicity Hayes-McCoy

Book - 2020

Distance makes no difference to love ... Eager to cheer up her recently-widowed gran, Cassie Fitzgerald persuades Lissbeg library to set up a Skype book club, linking readers on Ireland's Finfarran Peninsula with the little US town of Resolve, where generations of Finfarran's emigrants have settled. But when the club decides to read a detective novel, old conflicts on both sides of the ocean are exposed, hidden love affairs come to light, and, as secrets emerge, Cassie fears she may have done more harm than good. Will the truths she uncovers about her granny Pat's marriage affect her own hopes of finding love? Is Pat, who's still struggling with the death of her husband, about to fall out with her oldest friend? Or could... the transatlantic book club itself hold the clue to a triumphant happy ending?

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Subjects
Genres
Domestic fiction
Romance fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Felicity Hayes-McCoy (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Item Description
Sequel to: The month of borrowed dreams.
Includes P.S. Insights, Interviews & More... (pages 1-16 at end of work).
"Originally published in Ireland in 2019 by Hachette Books Ireland" -- Title page verso.
Physical Description
362, 16 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780063037397
9780062889508
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

In Hayes-McCoy's latest "Finfarran Peninsula" series (after The Mistletoe Matchmaker), Lissbeg and Resolve, the author's stand-ins for Clonmel in Ireland and Peoria, IL, are towns with a long-standing connection. In Lissbeg's less gentrified past, its emigrants largely went to Resolve, a town in upstate New York whose Irish life centers on the Shamrock Club, where misty-eyed visions of the old country are alive and well. The book club, whose members meet by Skype at Resolve's Shamrock Club and at Lissbeg's library, is the brainchild of Cassie Fitzgerald, a young woman who has come from Toronto to visit her Lissbeg grandmother, Pat, who is recently widowed and struggling to recover. These two women's lives--present-day loves and dilemmas for Cassie; flashbacks, regrets, and current friendship and family woes for Pat--form a story that spans generations and will keep readers cheering for the women as they find their feet. The many female characters can get muddling to start with, but readers who stick with this will be rewarded with an intriguing tale of getting over life's obstacles and a realistic look at modern rural Ireland. VERDICT Recommend this enjoyable family story to fans of the late Maeve Binchy.--Henrietta Verma, Credo Reference, New York

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