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Matters of the Heart
Matters of the Heart
Jan 17, 2026 6:21 PM

Author:Danielle Steel

Matters of the Heart

Hope Dunne is content with her life, finding serenity and beauty through the lens of her camera. She isn't looking for a man or excitement. But things change when she accepts a last minute assignment in London, photographing one of the world's most celebrated writers.

To Hope's surprise, Finn O'Neill exudes warmth and a boyish charm. He courts her, whisking her away to his palatial, isolated Irish estate, weaving a tapestry of tales about his life.

Hope finds it all absolutely dizzying. But soon cracks begin to appear in his stories and suddenly Hope is both in love and suspicious. How many lies has he told? Is it possible that this kind, loving, attentive man is hiding something even worse?

Reviews

A dramatic and increasingly dark yarn glittering with enough luxurious settings... to keep the glam-fixated reader happy

—— Wendy Holden , Daily Mail

Isherwood sketches with the lightest of touches the last gasp of the decaying demi-monde and the vigorous world of Communists and Nazis, grappling with each other on the edge of the abyss

—— Sunday Telegraph

What the Berlin stories retain, to a unique degree, is the ability to tell us what it really felt like then - to feel involved with the Germans and still to find that they retained their mystery; to be in the mode, yes, of a camera, and yet to be furiously, hopelessly involved

—— James Fenton

The first literary novel that really switched me on was Christopher Isherwood's Mr Norris Changes Trains

—— Chris Pattern , Daily Mail

He immortalised Berlin in two short, brilliant novels both published in the Thirties, Mr Norris Changes Trains and Goodbye To Berlin, inventing a new form for future generations - intimate, stylised reportage in loosely connected episodes

—— Daily Express

Mr Norris Changes Trains brought him recognition as one of the most promising young writers of his generation

—— The Times

The style is graceful and deliciously readable, and the novel ends with an unforgettably eerie and moving image'

—— Independent

AL Kennedy manages to convey an edgy modernity within relatively standard narrative forms...written with the tonal meticulousness of genuine literature

—— Lionel Shriver , Financial Times

Be warned, Kennedy is a good storyteller, and an even better observer, possessing immaculate timing... She also writes very well: there is an almost jaunty ease about her prose

—— Eileen Battersby , The Irish Times

Kennedy has a way of pinning words down and forcing the truth out of them that makes her fiction alarming. There is pleasure in reading these extraordinary stories, but there is also pain

—— Alison Kelly , Times Literary Supplement

There is poetic life in so many of Kennedy's images... She can be very funny too... very original, very startling

—— Miranda France , Literary Review

These tightly compressed short stories are deft portraits of people under extreme pressure, delivered with a surreal perspective that oddly serves to compound their power...her writing is superb: almost every word in this flinty, almost unbearably sad collection matters

—— Metro

It's a testament to her talent and her humanity that these broken lives are life-affirming in the way that only good art can be

—— Laura Tennant , New Statesman

Kennedy is attuned to the shock of separation, as well as the pain ... Kennedy is adept at different types of stories

—— Leo Robson , Express

A virtuoso of prose

—— London Review of Books

A L Kennedy's short stories are rare pearls, all seductive surface and dark depths

—— Vogue

What admirable richness and complexity

—— Jane Shilling , Evening Standard

Kennedy has such control over her material that it never overwhelms the reader or becomes showily gothic

—— Matt Thorne , Sunday Telegraph

There's no denying that these utterly controlled stories have a power, humanity, and even beauty of their own

—— Amber Pearson , Daily Mail

While What Becomes is not always an easy book to read, Kennedy's linguistic inventiveness, wild humour and compassion make it an unexpectedly joyful one

—— The London Review of Books

Twelve stories from the manic mistress of comically vitriolic observation

—— Angel Gurria-Quintana , Financial Times

Savour this book

—— Erica Wagner , The Times, Christmas Books

Kennedy specialises in acute observations of thought... In this collection of short stories, she inhabits unhappy couples, lonely shopkeepers and strangers in hotel rooms to searing, painful and comic effect

—— Holly Kyte , Daily Telegraph

A virtuoso performance...This is a collection of stories that will be re-reading exceptionally well, like an album of brilliant songs you keep wanting to hear again

—— Brandom Robshaw , Independent on Sunday

Funny and furious, Kennedy's tales of floundering marriages and domestic disappointment follow an anarchic path of their own

—— Independent

Kennedy's superlative work always attracts admiration

—— Lesley McDowell , Herald
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