Author:Jean Ritchie
'I'll always remember that Christmas. It was the day the angel came...'
It is Christmas Eve and Lisa faces another Christmas alone. After running away from home as a teenager to live with a man who treated her badly, Lisa has spent years searching for a peace and happiness that seem forever out of her reach. Now, at the age of 35, although she's settled in a job, she has never managed to open herself up to love.
For Lisa has a hidden guilt that's been at the centre of her life for as long as she can remember. And on this lonely Christmas Eve, the burden becomes too much to bear. But then something extraordinary happens, and suddenly Lisa realises that perhaps there is hope. And maybe it's time to forgive herself for her mistakes. There are many obstacles to overcome, but with the help of her angel, Lisa can learn to heal the rifts from her past, and find a love that will last...
Isherwood is one of the great mythmakers of his time. The Berlin Novels are masterpieces, funny, darkly innocent explorations of a world Berlin in the Thirties that is now as firmly in the past as Pompeii
—— ObserverMr Norris Changes Trains is a masterpiece in comic portraiture
—— GuardianIn Mr Norris Changes Trains, 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 TelegraphReading Goodbye to Berlin is much like overhearing anecdotes in a crowded bar while history knocks impatiently at the windows.
—— GuardianTouching...it will make you laugh, maybe make you cry and keep you reading past bedtime
—— Lauren Laverne , GraziaA wickedly funny, painfully honest look at families, festivities and romantic love
—— Marie ClaireTender, tough, schmaltzy, witty and heart-warming all at once. Knight has a great comic touch - there are some wonderfully rude bits and a fantastic rant about the ridiculous expectations piled on 21st-century women to be perfect - and writes with a deceptive lightness. At the heart of this funny, affectionate novel is an acknowledgement that families, like love, come in odd shapes and sizes, and that both matter more than anything
—— MetroWitty enough to make you laugh out loud, but there are moments of real emotion that keep the book from being too light
—— PsychologiesA superb ear for dialogue...wonderfully comic
—— Evening StandardRiotously high in laughs and glamour. I defy a festive grump not to be cheered by it
—— Independent Books of the YearFast-paced and funny
—— Women & HomeInfluenced by magical realism and the cool prose of modernism, first-time author Chloe Aridjis takes the best from each
—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald