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Your New Year Reading List
7 Answers
Don't miss The Unlikely Pilgrimage Of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce.
Several adjectives come to mind to describe it......touching, whimsical, amusing, moving, shrewd, absorbing............
Is anyone else enjoying it?
It is one of those rare books which you read slowly in order to put off finishing it.
B.
Several adjectives come to mind to describe it......touching, whimsical, amusing, moving, shrewd, absorbing............
Is anyone else enjoying it?
It is one of those rare books which you read slowly in order to put off finishing it.
B.
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No best answer has yet been selected by barbara1835. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.After The Woman In Black, Harold's Pilgrimage is just what you need!
I couldn't bear TWIB and it was some days before I could shake off the gloom. In fact I began to wonder if Susan Hill suffers from depression, to have written such a dark novel, with no lightness or sense of redemption.q
At first I thought Harold's story was another light 'wild goose chase' sort of novel, but as I get further into it there are many deeper levels, gradually unfolding, with light touches here and there which pin-point the serious notes.
What a clever writer Rachel Joyce is.......rather like Jane Gardam.
I believe her second novel is on the way. Good.
I will add James Robertson and Isabella Bird to my list.....thank you.
b.
I couldn't bear TWIB and it was some days before I could shake off the gloom. In fact I began to wonder if Susan Hill suffers from depression, to have written such a dark novel, with no lightness or sense of redemption.q
At first I thought Harold's story was another light 'wild goose chase' sort of novel, but as I get further into it there are many deeper levels, gradually unfolding, with light touches here and there which pin-point the serious notes.
What a clever writer Rachel Joyce is.......rather like Jane Gardam.
I believe her second novel is on the way. Good.
I will add James Robertson and Isabella Bird to my list.....thank you.
b.
Yes it is cheerful in the sense that everything comes right in the end.
At the beginning Harold and his wife are estranged after a family tragedy. His wife is very bitter but when Harold sets off on his long walk, working out his own demons and carrying out his own penance, she gradually comes out of her dark place as well, and tries to help him.
By the end they are in much better frame of mind and they manage to help each other. They achieve redemption.
There are some amusing touches such as the thrill-seekers who jump on the band-wagon as he does his long walk, and the characters are sympathetic.
I hope you enjoy it.
Barbara.
At the beginning Harold and his wife are estranged after a family tragedy. His wife is very bitter but when Harold sets off on his long walk, working out his own demons and carrying out his own penance, she gradually comes out of her dark place as well, and tries to help him.
By the end they are in much better frame of mind and they manage to help each other. They achieve redemption.
There are some amusing touches such as the thrill-seekers who jump on the band-wagon as he does his long walk, and the characters are sympathetic.
I hope you enjoy it.
Barbara.