‘Rich with the sounds and scents of long ago English summers’ Sunday Times
‘A winning story of misplaced passion’ Independent
The secrets and tragedies of a family’s past, and the far-reaching effects on succeeding generations of women…
The women in Helena Mayrick’s family have always led secretive and tragic lives, and when Helena’s comfortable marriage is devastated by her husband’s violent death, it seems that she, too, is locked into the cycle.
Helena is invited to research a book on her grandfather, H. Donaldson, the celebrated Edwardian photographer. At first she is reluctant to immerse herself in family history, particularly as Donaldson’s relationship with her grandmother, Ruth, is shrouded in mystery and turmoil.
But gradually, as the story of enigmatic Ruth and the elusive, passionate Donaldson unfolds, Helena finds that the past, like the present, was shaped by cruel dilemmas and the demands of love…
‘A winning story of misplaced passion’ Independent
The secrets and tragedies of a family’s past, and the far-reaching effects on succeeding generations of women…
The women in Helena Mayrick’s family have always led secretive and tragic lives, and when Helena’s comfortable marriage is devastated by her husband’s violent death, it seems that she, too, is locked into the cycle.
Helena is invited to research a book on her grandfather, H. Donaldson, the celebrated Edwardian photographer. At first she is reluctant to immerse herself in family history, particularly as Donaldson’s relationship with her grandmother, Ruth, is shrouded in mystery and turmoil.
But gradually, as the story of enigmatic Ruth and the elusive, passionate Donaldson unfolds, Helena finds that the past, like the present, was shaped by cruel dilemmas and the demands of love…
Reviews
A winning story of misplaced passion
Touching prose and passion make this romance a must-read
Rich with the sounds and scents of long ago English summers, this could easily be a study in nostalgia, but it is more than that
The theme of FOOTSTEPS - that of the effects of misplaced, frequently repressed love and passion on succeeding generations of women - is put together with intelligence and feeling, a grasp of narrative pace and an empathy for the weather-battered Suffolk coast where it is set. The author's touch is appealingly fresh and she succeeds in suggesting the complexity, waywardness and inexplicable patches that constitute life
Irreducibly delicate and tough-minded