247onlineshopping.co.uk
 Location:  Home» Books » General AAS » Forgive and Forget  
Categories
Electronics
Music
DVD
Software
Toys
Video Games
Personal Care
Home/Garden
Kitchen
Outdoor Living
Books
Harry Potter
Sports & Leisure
Jewellery & Watches
Music
Baby Store
Outdoor Living
Business Books
Xmas Store
Halo 3
Halo 3 (Xbox 360)

 
2GB SD Card
Kingston Technology 2GB SD Secure Digital Card

 
Braun Oral-B EB17-8 Refill Pack
Braun Oral-B EB17-8 Refill Pack

 

Forgive and Forget

Forgive and Forget

enlarge enlarge 
Author: Patricia Scanlan
Publisher: Transworld Ireland
Category: Book

List Price: £12.99
Buy New: £7.04
You Save: £5.95 (46%)



New (17) Used (4) from £3.84

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 4914

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 400
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.4

ISBN: 184827016X
EAN: 9781848270169
ASIN: 184827016X

Publication Date: July 28, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Forgive and Forget
  • Audio Cassette - Forgive and Forget
  • Audio CD - Forgive and Forget
  • Paperback - Forgive and Forget
  • Paperback - Forgive and Forget
  • Paperback - Forgive and Forget

Similar Items:

  • Lessons in Heartbreak
  • This Charming Man
  • Remember Me?
  • Wedding Season
  • Beach House, The

Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Delivering the goods   June 29, 2008
Tony Kavanagh (Dublin, Ireland)
6 out of 7 found this review helpful

One of Scanlan's greatest attributes is her determination to humanise her characters. And we're not just talking about the central heroine. The ostensible "bad guys" are presented as fully fleshed-out people too. While popular fiction is often presented/dismissed merely as 'good, clean fun' this book is the kind of proper storytelling that manages to transcend the genre.

For me, Scanlan's career high has always been "Promises, Promises." That position has now been usurped by "Forgive and Forget." These books share a certain dark realism and a real humanity that makes them more compelling. To very loosely paraphrase Lisa Stansfield, Connie Adams may not be a surgically-enhanced Jackie Collinsesque powerbabe, but she's all woman. Elsewhere, the woman we'd all hate to work with, Judith - bitterly encumbered by responsibilities - is a heartbreaking, three-dimensional soul. The bane in her life, her scared and frail mother, is also sensitively realised. There are moments in the book (I won't spoil it for you!) when you find yourself groaning "No! Don't do it" but, true to real life, the character goes ahead and does it because they are too likeably human, too realistically weak to resist.

Given the paths the protagonists have been following, I think the sequel will be just as dark and beguiling. Unlike the reviewer 'chic lit', I am pleased that there is more to come from these characters. Hurry up, Ms. Scanlan, your readers await!



5 out of 5 stars Better than ever!   April 15, 2008
Sissel M. Ostdahl (Norway)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Dare I say that this is Patricia Scanlan's best book to date? I think so. From page one I was drawn into the story and completely hooked. Not a dull moment. Pure joy all the way.

Not that the story itself is all bliss. Connie and Barry have been divorced for years. Barry is married again to Aimee and has 13 year old daughter Melissa in this marriage. Now Connie and Barrie's daughter Debbie is getting married and the event leads to a myriad of complications in the two families. One of them being Barry's renewed interest in his first wife, whom he left so many years ago...

Aimee is a tough, self-sentered career woman, with business trips abroad, designer clothes and no time for cosy family life.

First wife, Connie, is her opposite. A nurse, she has raised Debbie single-handedly and created a nice little home with a heavenly flower garden for the two of them. Neither money nor time has allowed for fancy clothes and pursuing a svelte body over the years. Connie appears a bit frumpyish and middle aged, and has seemingly lived in contented celibacy, until now!

There are other people and destinies to be met in this rich and fulfilling tale, which is not your regular chick lit but a wise story about life and love, regrets and new hope.

The book is excellently written and filled with humour. Always a bliss. A golden moment is young Melissa and her best friend Sarah's participation in Debbie's wedding, described with much insight and tenderness. Ah, to be 13 again, with your whole life ahead of you (and posters of Johnnie Depp over your bed...).

The book is not neatly wrapped up in a happy ending. Expertly, new threads are being woven in and create expectations for joys to come. Joys we are invited to share, the last sentence being - To be continued.

I can't wait.



5 out of 5 stars FANTASTIC   April 23, 2008
Mrs. A. nash (germany)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I bought Patricia Scanlan's new book at the airport and didn't put it down, as a child whose parents also split up when I was very young I could totally sympathise with what Debbie was going through coming up to her wedding. A brilliant read and I would recommend it to everyone.


4 out of 5 stars Best Patricia Scanlan so far...   March 12, 2008
Rosa- Maeve (Dublin, Ireland)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I have read almost all of Patricia Scanlan's books and enjoyed this the most. She manages to engage with the characters in a manner that moves the plot along but doesn't delve into superfluous detail, as is an unfortunate habit of many writers of this genre. An enjoyable read!

One criticism, however, the theme of age is prevalent in the book, but without the writer explicitly telling us the ages of the various characters I would have had no idea at all. More attention to this detail would have aided the character development.



4 out of 5 stars Really enjoyed it!   April 7, 2008
Zara (Belfast)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I have to agree with another reviewer here - this is Patricia's best book so far. I read it on holiday and could hardly put it down. She deals with the subject of weddings and families really well and also she depicts older female characters very well too. I felt really sorry for poor Judith who at fifty is spiteful, resentful and discontent because she feels life has passed her by while she's been taking care of her mother Lily and has no help from either of her siblings. You really understand why she is the way she is by the end of the book. I also really liked Connie, first wife and mother-of-the bride and I liked melissa, the teenage step sister of the bride for all her naivety and rebellious teenage ways. The run up to the wedding was narrated really well and I enjoyed reading about the actual day. I would give this 5 stars but because it 'is to be continued' I removed a star. How can I wait a whole year to find out what happens next??? It's so frustrating!!!

 

© 2005-2008 247OnlineShopping.co.uk . All rights reserved. In association with Amazon.co.uk . Help | Delivery Rates | Resources