Ten Reasons To Love Grace After Henry by Eithne Shortall #BlogTour #GraceAfterHenry

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for the heart-warming and wonderfully engaging Grace After Henry by Eithne Shorthall.  Below you can read ten reasons I think readers will love this tender, funny and emotional story.

My thanks to Corvus Books and Anne Cater at Random Things Tours for the advance review copy in return for an honest and unbiased review.  You can find details of the other book bloggers taking part in the tour in the banner at the bottom of this post.  Check them out for more reviews and other content.

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In three words: Touching, heart-warming, hopeful

Try something similar…Under an Amber Sky by Rose Alexander (click here to read my review)


Grace After HenryAbout the Book

Grace sees her boyfriend Henry everywhere. In the supermarket, on the street, at the graveyard.

Only Henry is dead. He died two months earlier, leaving a huge hole in Grace’s life and in her heart. But then Henry turns up to fix the boiler one evening, and Grace can’t decide if she’s hallucinating or has suddenly developed psychic powers. Grace isn’t going mad – the man in front of her is not Henry at all, but someone else who looks uncannily like him. The hole in Grace’s heart grows ever larger.

Grace becomes captivated by this stranger, Andy – to her, he is Henry, and yet he is not. Reminded of everything she once had, can Grace recreate that lost love with Andy, resurrecting Henry in the process, or does loving Andy mean letting go of Henry?

Format: ebook, paperback (432 pp.)    Publisher: Corvus Books
Published:3rd May 2018                          Genre: Contemporary Fiction, Romance

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops) *links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Grace After Henry on Goodreads


Ten Reasons To Love Grace After Henry by Eithne Shortall

One – The believable and touching portrayal of the impact of losing someone close to you.  The regrets – if only you’d said all the things you’d meant to say.  The guilt – that if you’d done things differently perhaps events would have taken a different course.  The anger – why me?  The loneliness and sense of displacement in a world that suddenly seems to be missing a vital part.

Two – How Grace’s memories of the good times with Henry are cleverly evoked through fragments of their conversations that demonstrate their shared sense of humour.  She-Ra as boyhood fantasy figure anyone?

Three – How Grace and Henry both loved Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol and re-read it often together.  (This brought a tear to my eye as my husband and I also share a love of this book, though we’ve never read it aloud to each other doing all the voices…)

Four – The Three Wise Men: the three lovely men Grace meets at the cemetery on her regular visits to tend Henry’s grave.  Each of them is mourning someone close to them as well.  They provide valuable companionship in love, loss, grief and memory…even if that does mean putting up with the same awful jokes every time.

Five – The incidental characters:  Dermot, Grace’s boss and frustrated actor; Betty, Grace’s next door neighbour for whom the word ‘nosy’ is too inadequate a description; and Grace’s Mum and Dad, touchingly delighted by each other’s company (their planned outing to Nando’s had me choking on my tea).

Six – Grace’s dogged belief in the idea that there may be parallel worlds and existences in which there could have been a different outcome , a different life and a future together for her and Henry.

Seven – The possibility of second chances in life and in love.  Who isn’t drawn to that idea?

Eight – The interesting way the author explores Grace’s conflicted feelings as she gets to know Andy and what at first seems like a miracle turns out to bring all sorts of complications and unintended consequences.

Nine – The question the novel poses: do we ever really truly know anybody?  Grace thought she knew everything about Henry – the way he liked his tea, his favourite film.  But it transpires there were things about him she could never have imagined.

Ten – The message of the book (at least for me) that you should cherish every moment you have with a loved one.


EithneShortallAbout the Author

EITHNE SHORTALL studied journalism at Dublin City University and has lived in London, France and America. Now based in Dublin, she is chief arts writer for the Sunday Times Ireland. She enjoys sea swimming, cycling and eating scones.  Grace After Henry is her second novel. Shorthall’s bestselling debut novel, Love in Row 27, has been optioned for a TV series by NBC Universal Studios International, the production company behind Downton Abbey.

Connect with Eithne

Website ǀ  Twitter  ǀ  Instagram ǀ Goodreads

 

Grace After Henry Blog Tour Poster

Blog Tour/Review: Fault Lines by Doug Johnstone

I’m delighted to be kicking off the blog tour for Fault Lines by Doug Johnstone alongside my tour buddy – appropriately, given the setting of the book – Joanne at Portobello Book Blog.    As regular followers of What Cathy Read Next will know, my usual reading diet is historical fiction but when it comes to thrillers I know I can’t go far wrong with titles published by Orenda Books.  I haven’t been disappointed yet and Fault Lines was no exception.

Do take a look at the tour schedule at the bottom of this post to see the other great book bloggers taking part in the tour.


Fault LinesAbout the Book

A little lie… a seismic secret… and the cracks are beginning to show…

In a re-imagined contemporary Edinburgh, where a tectonic fault has opened up to produce a new volcano in the Firth of Forth, and where tremors are an everyday occurrence, volcanologist Surtsey makes a shocking discovery.  On a clandestine trip to new volcanic island The Inch, to meet Tom, her lover and her boss, she finds his lifeless body, and makes the fatal decision to keep their affair, and her discovery, a secret. Desperate to know how he died, but also terrified she’ll be exposed, Surtsey’s life quickly spirals into a nightmare when someone makes contact – someone who claims to know what she’s done…

Format: ebook, paperback (300 pp.)        Publisher: Orenda Books
Published: 22nd May 2018 (paperback)   Genre: Crime, Thriller

Pre-order/Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Fault Lines on Goodreads


My Review

Surtsey is following in the footsteps of her mother in studying to be a volcanologist and she has the perfect object of study on her doorstep.  Well, across the sea, to be precise – the volcanic island known as The Inch which erupted out of the Firth of Forth on the day she was born.  Being named after another volcanic island (this one in Iceland) proves to be apt because Surtsey’s life is about to erupt in the most dramatic way possible when she discovers the body of her boss and married lover, Tom, on The Inch, the location of their intended tryst.  She decides to say nothing for fear of their affair coming to light.  However, it turns out to be too late as someone else appears to know her secret – in fact, all her secrets.

I really liked the way the author used geology as a metaphor for the situation Surtsey finds herself in.  The frequent earth tremors resulting from the movement of the tectonic plates mirror the upheaval in Surtsey’s life.  In addition, it transpires she has more than just the death of her lover creating fissures in a life already made unstable by too much alcohol and other stimulants, infidelity and strained relations with her sister, Iona.

In a way Fault Lines has many of the elements of a classic whodunit as there a number of possible suspects.  Two thirds of the way through the book, things get a whole lot more complicated for Surtsey as her secret tormenter closes in and secrets from the past are revealed that change everything.   My suspicions did eventually turn towards the actual culprit although what their motive could be eluded me.  The book builds to an exciting and dramatic climax in which the forces of Mother Nature, aptly, play a significant part.

Fault Lines is an imaginative, dark and accomplished thriller with believable – if not necessarily likeable – characters set in a convincingly described location.  I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Orenda Books, and Anne Cater at Random Things Tours, in return for an honest and unbiased review.

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In three words: Imaginative, gripping, suspenseful

Try something similar…The Ice by Laline Paull (click here for my review)


doug-johnstone1-credit-chris-scottAbout the Author

Doug Johnstone is an author, journalist and musician based in Edinburgh. He’s had eight novels published, most recently Crash Land. His previous novel, The Jump, was a finalist for the McIlvanney Prize for Scottish Crime Novel of the Year. Doug is also a Royal Literary Fund Consultant Fellow. He’s worked as an RLF Fellow at Queen Margaret University, taught creative writing at Strathclyde University and been Writer in Residence at Strathclyde University and William Purves Funeral Directors. He mentors and assesses manuscripts for The Literary Consultancy and regularly tutors at Moniack Mhor writing retreat. Doug has released seven albums in various bands, reviews books for the Big Issue, is player-manager for Scotland Writers Football Club and has a PhD in nuclear physics.      (Photo credit: Chris Scott)

Connect with Doug

Website | Twitter ǀ Goodreads

Fault Lines blog poster 2018