Thanks for the Memories
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- 5,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
‘The legendary Ahern will keep you guessing what binds these stories. A classic.’ Company
How can you know someone you’ve never met?
Justin Hitchcock is divorced, lonely and restless. He arrives in Dublin to give a lecture on art and meets an attractive doctor, who persuades him to donate blood. It's the first thing to come straight from his heart in a long time.
When Joyce Conway leaves hospital after a terrible accident, with her life and her marriage in pieces, she moves back in with her elderly father. All the while, a strong sense of déjà vu is overwhelming her and she can't figure out why…
Heart-warming, intriguing and thoughtful, this is a love story that will surprise you at every turn.
Reviews
'The key to Ahern's success is her ability to not just tell a good story, but sprinkle it with plenty of laughs, tears and a little bit of magic' Mirror
'Cecelia Ahern is queen of the modern fairytale . . . Ahern has given her readers exactly what they want: love, magic, happy endings. And most of all, hope' Irish Times
‘Unputdownable' Grazia
About the author
Cecelia Ahern was born and grew up in Dublin. Her novels have been translated into thirty-five languages and have sold more than twenty-five million copies in over fifty countries. Two of her books have been adapted as films and she has created several TV series.
She and her books have won numerous awards, including the Irish Book Award for Popular Fiction for The Year I Met You.
She lives in Dublin with her family.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Contrivance and a multitude of sitcom mixups drive Ahern's fifth novel. When Joyce Conway gets a blood transfusion after a tragic accident that caused her to miscarry, she strangely picks up the memories of her donor. Upon release from the hospital, she moves in with her father to try to cope with her impending divorce and the loss of her baby, but ends up instead on a wild goose chase after feeling a connection with a mysterious, smoldering stranger in a hair salon. Their relationship is obvious to the reader immediately, which makes the following several hundred pages a less than satisfying exercise in delaying the inevitable. Fans of Ahern's earlier work won't be disappointed with the fairy tale like feeling, but readers not already in the fold might not stick around to the obvious conclusion.