Rosie Goodwin
AFTER the death of her beloved husband Tom, Sunday Branning
thought things couldn’t get any worse… but there’s a war on the horizon and
life has never seemed so uncertain.
In the final chapter of her much-loved popular Days of the
Week family sagas, master storyteller Rosie Goodwin makes a welcome return to
the compelling story of Sunday Small, the young girl who stole readers’ hearts
in the opening book of the series, Mothering Sunday. A former social worker and foster mother, Goodwin has
written over thirty beautiful sagas, and was awarded the rights to follow three
of the late, great Tyneside writer Catherine Cookson’s trilogies with her own
sequels.
However, the countryside around Nuneaton in Warwickshire has
always been the inspiration for Goodwin’s own tales of hardship, love and hope,
and here we catch up with Sunday who was abandoned at birth in 1870 at the Nuneaton
Union Workhouse. Now aged 60, Sunday has come a
long way since those early years of privation and cruelty. As a teenager, she
was taken under the wing of a kindly young teacher, but was forced to leave
behind the workhouse and everything and everybody she had ever known when she attracted
the unwelcome attention of the workhouse master.
PERFECT ENDING: Rosie Goodwin |
She went on to marry her childhood
sweetheart, Tom Branning, and they own Treetops Manor in the Warwickshire
countryside where Tom still manages his successful horse stud business and
Sunday once ran a loving foster home for troubled children.
Treetops is also home to Tom and
Sunday’s daughter, Livvy, who has grown up surrounded by the horses she adores,
and Kathy, the couple’s 16-year-old foster daughter who they have brought up as
if she was their own.
But the Branning family is
overwhelmed with despair when Tom dies instantly in a riding accident and five
years later, the running of the estate, which the still grief-stricken Sunday
has left in the hands of Tom’s illegitimate son Ben, is now in chaos.
Sunday is keen to see both her girls married, but Livvy, who
is doing a secretarial course, has no intentions of settling down and would
much rather spend time with her friends. And when Kathy, who is training to be
a nurse, falls for the wrong man, her ambitions are soon forgotten as she
embarks on a secret affair. As their financial difficulties begin to mount, the women of
Treetops are forced to leave their home… and their world is about to be turned
upside down yet again as the drums of war beat ever louder.
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Time to Say Goodbye is the perfect ending to what has been an enchanting reading experience, with each story featuring a cast of superbly drawn characters (some of whom have reappeared in this final curtain call), emotional, action-packed dramas, and fascinating facts about the realities of life for women over the last 150 years.
The joys of friendship, and the strength that comes from
close family relationships, have always taken centre stage, all acutely
observed with Goodwin’s warmth, wisdom and insight. And the glittering good news is that Goodwin is already
working on a new series, The Precious Stones collection, in which each main
character will be named after a gemstone. Look out for Opal’s story… coming
soon!
(Zaffre, hardback, £12.99)
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