TEST
A Place to Call Home is one of the best contemporary romances I have read in a long time. It takes place in Dunderry, Georgia – a small town populated by the descendants of Irish immigrants, the most prominent of whom are the Malloy and Delaney families. Claire Malloy is the main character and the story is told through her eyes. We first meet Claire when she is a reluctant five-year-old leprechaun in the annual St. Patrick’s Day parade. When Claire sees one of her cousins steal some money from a booth and then try to put the blame on Roan Sullivan, the abused son of the town drunk, her Irish is aroused and she defends him. From then on Claire is Roan’s little champion and protector.
Roan is ten when we first meet him, dirty, smelly, and bitterly ashamed of his drunken father and the circumstances under which he is forced to live. Roan is a good boy – good to the core, but life has shown him only kicks and blows and he is wary of Claire and her unconditional championing of him. Roan and Claire’s paths cross many times for the next five years – she defends him to everybody and he protects her from various and sundry bullies. For a time, it even looks like Roan will become a legal part of the Malloy family, until his father brutally attacks Claire and suddenly, Roan is gone.
Twenty years later, Claire is making a name for herself as a journalist. When Claire is shot and wounded by the husband of a battered woman whom she has been profiling, Roan comes back into her life. Roan is a self-made millionaire – a handsome and well-respected man, but the shadows of his past still cling to him. Roan and Claire have never forgotten each other, and the attraction between the two is still there, only now it is the attraction of a man for a woman.
Roan and Claire have to slowly regain their trust in each other. Roan has not forgotten that Claire’s family turned him out when his father attacked her, and Claire is still angry with Roan for disappearing for twenty years. Also, Claire’s family has been harboring a secret that will have an impact on the relationship between Claire and Roan, Roan and the Malloys, and Claire and her family.
The first part of A Place to Call Home is the best. Young Claire is a spunky, sprightly, and lovable little girl without one speck of sentimentality. We see the large Malloy and Delaney families, warts and all, through Claire’s eyes. Most noteworthy are the Old Grannies, Claire’s cultured and deceptively frail maternal grandmother, and her tough, no-nonsense paternal great-grandmother who live to insult each other and quarrel. I will admit though, that trying to make my way through the tangled thickets of Claire’s large family was, at times, tough going even for me – and I have eight brothers and sisters and more cousins than I can count!
The second half of the novel, where Claire and Roan are adults, was not quite as memorable, but still held my interest. We get to know Roan much better in this section, and he comes across as a truly admirable and genuinely decent man who transcended a childhood from hell.
A Place to Call Home does have a few very violent scenes. Those readers who dislike that, take heed. But A Place to Call Home is neither grim nor depressing, despite its occasional violence, and the horror of much of Roan Sullivan’s young life. Ultimately, it is an affirmation of the strength of families, and the healing power of love.
Grade: B+
Book Type: Contemporary Romance
Sensuality: Subtle
Review Date: 19/06/98
Publication Date: 1998
Recent Comments …
Yep
This sounds delightful! I’m grabbing it, thanks
excellent book: interesting, funny dialogs, deep understanding of each character, interesting secondary characters, and also sexy.
I don’t think anyone expects you to post UK prices – it’s just a shame that such a great sale…
I’m sorry about that. We don’t have any way to post British prices as an American based site.
I have several of her books on my TBR and after reading this am moving them up the pile.