The People Next Door: A joyful, unputdownable read from this bestselling author

· Hachette UK
4.4
5 reviews
Ebook
448
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

'Roisin Meaney is a skilful storyteller' Sheila O'Flanagan

A warm, spell-binding tale of friendship, love and second chances from this Number One bestselling author.

Behind the brightly coloured doors of Miller's Avenue live people with very complicated lives...

When Yvonne in number 7 joins an online dating website, she's looking for something more than friendship but after a series of disastrous encounters, decides to shut down her account. Is she shutting out her only chance of finding love?

While next door Dan, still reeling from his wife's desertion, signs up for a cookery course. As his lemon souffle rises, so does his interest in someone close to home ...

Further along, Kathryn is struggling to keep her marriage together despite the best efforts of her interfering mother-in-law. As tension grows between the two women, Kathryn wonders if Grainne will finally succeed, as she realises that she may never give her husband Justin what he wants.

As the drama unfolds along Millers Avenue, the inhabitants learn that the things you most yearn for can often be found on your own doorstep.

Ratings and reviews

4.4
5 reviews
Midge Odonnell
August 22, 2018
Roisin Meaney has done it again, taken the trivialities and mundanity of life and made them in to an interesting read. Miller's Avenue may only have 3 houses on it now but there is a rich seam to be mined in these resident's lives. It did feel almost voyeuristic at times as we pop in to Numbers 7, 8 and 9 to see just what they are up to. Really, nothing out of the ordinary happens to any of the protagonists in the book. When you stop and think about it these are kitchen sink dramas that are likely happening just next door to us every day without us realising. What makes this so enticing to read I don't know. As I have come to expect from Ms Meaney's books there is no overt characterisation of anyone in the book and we are left to make up our own minds about who these people are. We learn about them from their conversations with friends, colleagues and neighbours; from their internal dialogues and from their little snippets of backstory that are eked on to the page rather frugally. This means that it is like getting to know someone at work or the new neighbour that has just moved in. The plot is very gentle and really meanders on to the page rather than being overt. There is a very definite story arc about reaching for your happiness and overcoming the obstacles that life thrusts in to your path but it is a slow build and doesn't slap you around the face. In some ways it was like reading a diary written by each of the characters but one which draws you in and makes you eager to find out what happens in 3 weeks time and if what they did 2 days ago will affect them now. This book is a celebration of everyday life and shows how no matter how work-a-day and pedestrian life feels it is full of drama if only we know how to acknowledge the small events that really mean so much.
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About the author

Roisin Meaney was born in Listowel, Co Kerry, She has lived in the US, Canada, Africa and Europe but is now based in Clare, Ireland. This Number One bestselling author is a consistent presence on the Irish bestseller list and she is the author of twenty novels including Life Before Us, It's That Time of Year and The Restaurant. She has also written books for children. Connect with Roisin Meaney on @roisinmeaney or at www.roisinmeaney.com

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