General Book Search for "9781529003390"

Mum & Dad

Paperback
Published : Thursday 5 March 2020
ISBN : 9781529003390
Price : €18.06


You may also like ...

Product

An Unsuitable Match

€22.88

Extended stock - Dispatch 5-7 days
Product

Next of Kin

€19.26

Extended stock - Dispatch 5-7 days
Product

Mum & Dad

€18.06

Extended stock - Dispatch 5-7 days
Product

The Best of Friends

€19.26

Extended stock - Dispatch 5-7 days

Description

Their parents made a choice years ago. Now they're counting on the children to step in. After so much time, can old wounds heal? Mum and Dad by the Sunday Times bestseller, Joanna Trollope, is a wise, brilliantly-drawn examination of a modern family dilemma.

Sunday Times number one bestseller Joanna Trollope explores the issues at the heart of a modern family with her trademark wit and warmth, in Mum & Dad. 'What a mess, she thought now . . . what a bloody, unholy mess the whole family has got itself into.' It's been twenty-five years since Gus and Monica left England to start a new life in Spain, building a vineyard and wine business from the ground up. However, when Gus suffers a stroke and their idyllic Mediterranean life is thrown into upheaval, it's left to their three grown-up children in London to step in . . . Sebastien is busy running his company with his wife, Anna, who's never quite seen eye-to-eye with her mother-in-law. Katie, a successful solicitor in the City, is distracted by the problems with her long-term partner, Nic, and the secretive lives of their three daughters. And Jake, ever the easy-going optimist, is determined to convince his new wife, Bella, that moving to Spain with their eighteen-month-old would be a good idea. As the children descend on the vineyard, it becomes clear that each has their own idea of how best to handle their mum and dad, as well as the family business. But as long-simmering resentments rise to the surface and tensions reach breaking point, can the family ties prove strong enough to keep them together? 'Trollope writes about family relationships with intelligence and clear-eyed sympathy' - The Times



Reviews