Author:Cecilia Samartin
It is 1955 and two cousins, Nora and Alicia, are growing up in Cuba, where the sea is a beguiling turquoise and at night the lights glitter like stars along Havana's shoreline. But revolutionary storm clouds are gathering, and as Fidel Castro comes to power, banks are closed, religion outlawed, and food shortages begin. Nora and her family emigrate to California; Alicia and hers stay behind.
But Nora has left her heart in Cuba with her cousin. As the years pass and she becomes a woman, Alicia writes of her marriage to Tony, the birth of her daughter, and the terrible privations ordinary Cubans are suffering.
When Tony is arrested for anti-revolutionary behaviour, and Alicia and her daughter's survival becomes increasingly hand-to-mouth, Nora knows she must leave her privileged life in America and return to help them. But Cuba, and Alicia's life as a single parent, is like nothing she has ever imagined...
'Writes with shimmering grace about homeland and exile, passion and loyalty...A richly textured story, sensuous and haunting'
—— Janet Fitch, bestselling author of WHITE OLEANDER'Ghost Heart is Samartin's debut novel and it has all the ingredients of a literary masterpiece and a bestseller. Her characters are alive and the descriptions of Cuba are enough to make one want to catch the next flight out there. An enchanting read, not to be missed'
—— Handbag.com'I dare anyone not to be moved...the book is ultimately uplifting - a testimony to the strength of love and the human spirit'
—— Traveller magazineInfallibly elegant... All this lies beneath the sparkling, well groomed surface of a novel which could quite easily be read as a light diversion for an idle afternoon. But look more closely and something as grim as Greek tragedy is played out around the cosy family dinner table
—— Jane Shilling , DAILY TELEGRAPHAs ever, Trollope writes about family life with wit, intelligence and verve
—— GUARDIANA poignant tale about a mother watching her children grow up and marry, and her sadness as they drift further away. Joanna's descriptive writing expresses true wrought emotion and hurt
—— HEAT REVIEWThe author's psychology, as always, is sound, the plotting secure and the pacing brisk and page-turning. Another winner
—— DAILY MAILSociologically and psychologically as observant as ever
—— SPECTATORBook of the Month: An intuitive and sympathetically observed piece of writing
—— GOOD HOUSEKEEPINGTrollope writes with customary compassion and humanity in this heartwarming and engaging novel
—— DAILY EXPRESSA very superior work of women's fiction... an exceedingly skilled analysis of the relationship between different generations of women and how the power shifts as the old, as they must, get old and the young move on... it is a story told beautifully
—— SUNDAY EXPRESSThe legendary Ms Trollope triumphs yet again, with her latest slick of classy chick-lit
—— HEATThis thoroughly engaging, intelligent, literate novel
—— WASHINGTON POSTThe brilliantly observed portrayal of family life is wonderfully compelling - and a story many will be able to identify with. ****
—— CLOSER