Author:Elizabeth Berg

A woman rediscovers meaning in life - a rich and deeply satisfying novel by the bestselling author of The Art of Mending and Open House.
When Betta Nolan's husband dies, she honours a promise she made to him to move to a small town and start a new life. Without minimizing her great sorrow, she nevertheless attempts to find pleasure on a daily basis. The Year of Pleasures is about deliberately acknowledging the solace found in ordinary things: a warm bath, good food, the beauty of nature, music, art found in museums and in gardens. Above all, it is about the various kindnesses people can and do offer one another. Betta's journey from grief to joy is an inspiring reminder of what is available to us all, regardless of our life circumstances. It suggests that no matter who we lose, life can still give bountifully to those who will receive.
Praise for Elizabeth Berg:
'Berg oozes warmth, wisdom and generosity of spirit. Her writing is quite brilliant, as soft as a kiss, as sharp as a knife. An American Maeve Binchy, a modern-day Jane Austen, whatever praise you heap on Elizabeth Berg, she probably deserves it.
Berg knows her characters intimately-she gets under their skin and leaves the reader with an indelible impression of lives challenged and changed.
—— The Seattle TimesHeartwrenching and hilarious. Berg sits somewhere between Anne Tyler and Alice Hoffman.
—— Chicago Sun-TimesMaybe Freud didn't know the answer to what women want, but Elizabeth Berg certainly does.
—— USA TodayWe loved this American family tale with its well drawn characters. It gripped like the best of thrillers
—— BellaThe author gets us to believe in her characters thereby making their ghastly dilemma seem all the more real. The result is a novel that, while staying just on the right side of sentimentality, is unafraid of dealing with strong emotions
—— Christina Koning , The TimesA nostalgic, compelling adventure laced with black humour
—— Time OutA compulsively readable novel about the seductiveness of storytelling... Both his characters and the electrifying manner in which Scudamore writes about Ecuador demonstrate the appeal as well as the danger of any fabulist's capacity for wonder
—— Literary ReviewBrilliant ... In a hilarious portrayal of the ups and downs of being wife No.2, The Second Wives Club puts paid to the stereotype of the wicked stepmother once and for all
—— SunThis is the perfect holiday read but would be just as entertainiing on the commute to work as accompanying you pool side
—— handbag.comSecond wives form a club to bitch about their husbands and in-laws in this compelling read
—— heatGoodwin does an excellent job...a bleak, clever, complex and utterly compelling thriller with the grip of a pitbull.
—— YORKSHIRE POSTBeautifully written...Idiosyncratic and highly enjoyable
—— GOOD BOOK GUIDENorth London gangland life and a very nasty murder mystery, but this highly compulsive, unputdownable novel is so much more...The events are extraordinary and the finale very disturbing and the reading experience is one of best I've had for a long time.
—— SARAH BROADHURST , THE BOOKSELLERIntense and deeply disturbing, Sweet Gum is the kind of story you can't help wishing...was strictly confined to the pages of a book. But it's not - this is real life in a modern world: a seedily contemporary world of criminals, lap-dancing, drugs, perversion, prostitution and betrayal. Written by a journalist known for her investigations into the crime underworld, Sweet Gum brilliantly captures the sense of the London streets with a scintillating nastiness that's totally addictive. Unputdownable
—— IRISH EXAMINERDeliciously bittersweet...vividly evoked...an assured, ambitious and inventive work
—— MSLEXIABrisk and wry intelligence...there is a constant wit and genuine sparkle of language at work here
—— SUNDAY TRIBUNEHer reputation as a gifted novelist will be assured...Sweet Gum balances a visceral portrait of modern evil with an ambitious work on the themes of redemption, love and justice which is both refreshing and strangely nostalgic.
—— THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT






