Factory Girls by Michelle Gallen

Factory Girls by Michelle Gallen

It’s summer 1994, and three eighteen year old girls are working in a shirt factory in a country town. They’re waiting for the exam results and all they want is to earn some money while having as much fun as possible. But this is Northern Ireland, so there are obstacles to overcome before Maeve, Caroline and Aoife can head off into the big wide world.

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Impossible by Sarah Lotz

Impossible by Sarah Lotz

Bee is working all hours to build up her dressmaking business and Nick is freelancing as a literary editor. Both of them are lonely and open to a relationship, but through no fault of their own, unimaginable difficulties stand in the way of their love affair. Fortunately the nature of their problem allows plenty of scope for humour.

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The Hive by Scarlett Brade

The Hive by Scarlett Brade

Hell has no fury like a woman dumped on Twitter. The pain suffered by Charlotte Goodwin after her celebrity boyfriend leaves her is intense. Not only does she have to cope with being abandoned by her lover, but she is jeered at by a Twitter group called the Hive. Meanwhile her rival is praised and envied. In her debut novel Scarlett Brade takes the reader inside the head of a woman at the centre of a perfect storm of resentment and humiliation. The resulting despair and anguish finds its outlet in premeditated murder.

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Yinka Where Is Your Huzband by Lizzie Damilola Blackburn

Yinka Where Is Your Huzband by Lizzie Damilola Blackburn

Lizzie Damilola Blackburn has created an original and engaging personality for her main character in Yinka Where Is Your Huzband. Yinka was born in the UK to deeply religious parents of Nigerian heritage. She is committed to her Christian faith, but when her mother stops the dancing at a family party and insists in praying openly for Yinka to find a husband, it is too much to take.

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Should I Tell You by Jill Mansell

Should I Tell You by Jill Mansell

Many thanks to Headline for sending me an advance review copy of Jill Mansell’s latest book, Should I Tell You? I knew I was going to like it as soon as I saw the intriguing map of Lanrock inside the front cover. This novel’s genre is feel-good fiction, and its theme is going home. People who have moved away from the place where they grew up often ask themselves how their lives would have turned out if they had stayed. By returning to live in Lanrock, the Cornish seaside town where they once shared loving foster parents, Amber, Lachlan and Raffaele disprove the old saying that you should never go back.

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Call of the Penguins by Hazel Prior

Call of the Penguins by Hazel Prior

Call of the Penguins has a cast of thousands, because Granny McCreedy has form in protecting the beloved birds. Her previous adventures are described in Hazel Prior’s first book, Away with the Penguins. Two years after she made a life-changing journey to rescue an endangered penguin colony, the eighty-seven year old returns to Antarctica with a film crew…

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Before My Actual Heart Breaks by Tish Delaney

Before My Actual Heart Breaks by Tish Delaney

I enjoyed Before My Actual Heart Breaks so much that I approached the author for an interview. I was thrilled when she agreed. Tish Delaney was born and brought up in Northern Ireland at the height of the Troubles. Like many people of her generation, she left the sectarian violence behind by moving to England. Her superb debut novel Before My Actual Heart Breaks explores emotional isolation and the long-lasting repercussions of trauma. Along the way there is plenty of wry Ulster humour to lighten the mood.

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I Have Something to Tell You by Susan Lewis

I Have Something to Tell You by Susan Lewis

‘They’re all related to each other around these parts….It’s what makes them the way they are,’ says Joe, a private investigator and lawyer Jay Wells’ father figure, in I Have Something to Tell You. The retired detective is an outsider from South Gloucestershire’s moneyed class, so he sees more of the game. At the core of this beautifully crafted novel is an intricate network of wealthy families and friends. Their charming habitat is impervious to the wickedness of the outside world – until it isn’t.

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Tinker Tailor Schoolmum Spy by Faye Brann

Tinker Tailor Schoolmum Spy by Faye Brann

Licensed to kill but in thrall to the PTA, a choice between full-time home-making and a return to her former career in espionage faces Victoria Turnbull. After unwittingly passing an ‘audition’ at her friend’s paintball party, she is recalled to active service and sent on refresher courses to update her technology skills and renew her weapons licence…

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My Name is Jensen by Heidi Amsinck

My Name is Jensen by Heidi Amsinck

On a Copenhagen street corner a murder victim lies buried in snow. Jensen, a newspaper reporter, stumbles on the body on her way to work. She is horrified to recognise the corpse as the young man she saw sitting alone on the pavement the night before. If she had stopped to help him find shelter from a blizzard, he would not have been stabbed to death.

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