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Love Blooms at the Cornish Cottage by Kim Nash #Review #SandpiperShores #PublicationDay

  We are returning to beautiful Cornwall with Kim Nash. Love Blooms at the Cornish Cottage  is published today by Boldwood Books on April 1st.    💔 How do you mend a broken heart? 💔 Michelle finally thought she’d found love with her hot Greek doctor. But when Demetri reveals he’s returning home to care for his sick mother, Michelle’s dream future crumbles. Choosing not to follow him feels like losing more than just love - it feels like losing who she’d started to become. Determined not to fall apart, Michelle decides to throw herself into rebuilding her life in Sandpiper Shore, but then unexpectedly, Demetri’s brother, Makkis, arrives on her doorstep. Offering him a room seems like the kind thing to do… but the constant reminder of her lost love is difficult for her heartbroken soul. And the more time she spends with Makkis, the clearer it becomes: there are parts of Demetri she never knew… Just as Michelle starts to heal with a little help from her fri...

The Butterfly Summer by Harriet Evans

    The Butterfly Summer is a family saga which gives us the stories of different female members of the Parr family through the generations. It concentrates on two in particular: Nina, in the present day and her Grandmother, Theodora, earlier in the twentieth century. The almost forgotten family home of Keepsake is a thread which binds their stories together. Fallen into disrepair, it has a story of its own having been gifted to the females in the Parr family by Charles II. 

    The stories of Theodora and Nina are told in parallel, both in the first person, with only the size of font to denote the different sections. Inevitably given the scope of the book, there are many characters to take on board in both accounts. I found the first part of the book rather slow to get into and I did get impatient when the narrative swapped from Nina to Theodora as there was a lot of family history to get through. I was pleased that I persevered however as the story was in the end, well-crafted and the twist, satisfying.

    Butterflies are a feature of Keepsake and the motif ran throughout the book. This part of the story has obviously been well researched and they add to the house's other worldly, almost magical atmosphere. Keepsake remains largely hidden from the casual passer-by and secrecy and hidden identities are important themes within the book. Elsewhere, outside events are there as a backdrop to the story, but Keepsake remains untouched by them. There are references to the riots which occurred in Britain in 2011 and earlier, the political attempts to avoid the Second World War and the subsequent treatment of the Jewish Community and displaced people. Above all, the unreliable narrators ensure that nothing can be taken at face value.

In short: a complicated family saga with many twists and turns.

Thanks to the publishers, Headline Review for a copy of the book.

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