Hello Love

14.99

98 in stock

SKU: SQ3041555 Category: Tags: ,
Description

Magic and colour abound for Jacqueline Clancy in the small town of Tooradulla – until her mother Imelda suddenly dies. Neither she nor her siblings are told the truth, and she retreats into a fantasy life. Soon it appears that her small town is about to expel her. With the help of her invisible friends Lou and Betty, Jacqueline attempts to get rid of the usurper, her Aunt Mina.

In Part Two, a much older Jacqueline has been betrayed by her husband Vaughan, who has left her for the younger Nuala. It is the classic tale of a woman who wants to put her children first: she has a family of three, but has to fight off loneliness and the need for love in her life.

In Hello Love, best-selling author Carmen Cullen expertly explores the dilemma of a woman who lost out on love in her young life and is now asked to let the certainty of her marriage go – and risk having her heart broken again.

Reviews
“Like Dennis Potter's landmark drama, Pennies from Heaven, the story of Lily O'Donoghue, a flighty eighteen-year-old UCD student aspiring to be a professional singer, is peppered with songs that evoke a wayward imagination fleeing reality. The songs were popularised by Carmen's aunt, Delia Murphy. A novel with a compelling storyline and a charged finish. Where Cullen excels is in crisply vivid portraits.” ––Alan Murdock, Sunday Times
“A flawlessly accurate recapturing of Dublin in the 1940s: Nelson's Pillar, silk stockings, Findlaters and Switzers, and Caffola's cafeteria and horses and donkeys drawing carriages on O'Connell Street." ––Mary Kenny, Irish Independent
Author

Carmen Cullen

Carmen Cullen was Head of English in Coláiste Dhúlaigh Secondary School in Dublin and Director of the Oscar Wilde Autumn School in Bray. She is now a full-time writer. Carmen’s widely praised first novel, Two Sisters Singing, is loosely based on the life of her aunt, the singer Delia Murphy. Her second novel, Hello Love, traces the effects of family on a writer’s life. Daisy, Daisy, the third part in the trilogy, reflects the shifting face of Ireland, and the dilemma of a mother who needs to grow and change, yet feels the strong pull to stay and protect her children.

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