'A sharp eye for detail that makes reading Boylan's work such a pleasure' Sunday Times
To Eugene Rafferty, girls are like money - they have to be saved. Despite living in 1950s Dublin, his three daughters, Bridie, Kitty and Rose, seem doomed to a Victorian childhood. However, as fortunes decline the Rafferty's are forced to take in lodgers and these independent but eccentric outsiders introduce the girls to new experiences - sex and superstition, of spite, of true love and tragedy. For in a world caught between the aftershock of the war and the transforming liberalism of the 1960s there are two states of womanhood: single, and caught up in the comic and desperate search for a suitable husband, or married and enduring the claustrophobia of suburban life.
Evoking the magic of childhood and adolescence with rare subtlety, wit and warmth, Room For A Single Lady is both delightfully comic and genuinely moving.
Read MoreA sharp eye for detail that makes reading Boylan's work such a pleasure - SUNDAY TIMESThis enchanting book, so evocative of the moods and sensations of childhood has the bite of pure gold - DAILY TELEGRAPHWitty ... beautifully written - MAIL ON SUNDAYBoylan writes like an angel, but an angel with a knowing eye - DAILY MAIL
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
© Hachette Aotearoa | New Zealand, All Rights Reserved · Site by Chook