A
SONG ONCE HEARD
BY
ANNE GORING
THE
BLURB:-
When
rich, handsome Daniel Penhale proposes to Sophy Beardmore, she is
swift to accept. The marriage seems to offer the security and
respectability she has always dreamed of in a life overshadowed by
her mother's feckless, radical way of living.
But
Daniel's wealth has not made Kildower, his Cornish house, a happy
place. It is haunted by old memories, not least those of his first
wife. Meraud. No one seems to know the true facts about her death,
though rumours and suspicions abound, fostered by the tragic legends
that cling to Kildower.
Daniel's
young daughter, Kensa, is resentful and sullen, her nurse, Jess
Southcote, is sly and manipulative, the local people hostile. Then
there is Meraud's brother Conan, who seems determined to strike up a
friendship with Sophy, but out of what dubious motives?
Only
when Sophy has unravelled the truth about the past and faced up to
her true feelings for both Conan and Daniel himself can she find the
happiness she seeks.
THE
REALITY:-
I
picked this up in a charity shop and then had to question why- a saga
set in 1830s Cornwall would surely contain moral characters, set in
moral times and be quite...boring? Wouldn't it? A bit like one of
those light, bright and trite “heart-warming” women's magazine
serials?
Thankfully,
no. This wasn't the case at all. The leading lady, Sophy, comes
from a dissipate background with a hedonistic mother, and it is this
life she is trying to move away from, and claim her own identity.
This book contained many little stories within it, and you find
yourself rooting for our heroine, as you just know that she's a
fundamentally good person (as opposed to some of the forces she is up
against).
I
was so grateful that the blurb did not contain comparisons to
“Rebecca”, as so many West Country novels, set in big rambling
houses where the husband has issues with his former wife do, as this
book is nothing like it.
I
enjoyed the real, gritty element of all the people I met in this book
(especially Captain Penhale), the supernatural and rustic element of
suspected ghosts and shrines to the gods and I certainly picked up on
the latent passion between Sophy and both Daniel and Con.
With an
unusual ending, this novel was a real eye-opener, and I would
definitely read books by this author again.
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