An Invisible Tattoo
By (Author) Suellen Dainty
Allen & Unwin
Echo Publishing
1st April 2025
Australia
General
Fiction
Paperback
320
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
When a last collection of songs by British musical icon, James Bennett, is discovered in an old Somerset house, rumours about his mysterious death during a wild midsummer party more than fifty years ago begin to swirl again. An accident Suicide Or murder
The only person still alive who knows what happened is frail but indomitable Ruth Henderson. She now lives in a Sydney apartment, but back in 1972 she was staying in Somerset with her closest friend, Adela McMahon, who was married to James.
From very different backgrounds, Ruth and Adela became inseparable while growing up in an isolated New South Wales rural town. And they longed to escape. Adela fled first, to the bright lights and hectic whirl of swinging London, where she soon met James. But all was not as gilded as it seemed. Ruth was a witness to her beloved friend's tempestuous and troubling relationship - and she was by Adela's side the night James died.
Journalists are clamouring to hear Ruth's story. Of them all, Ruth chooses young and ambitious Kate Griffin, who will do anything to boost her career. But as the past and the present begin to collide, an unexpected friendship grows between the two women and deciding what really matters proves life changing for them both.
Moving between contemporary Australia and England in 1972, and between the worlds of Ruth and Kate, this compelling and beautifully written novel is about secrets and confessions, about vulnerability and hidden strength, about the cruelty of betrayal and, most of all, about the inextinguishable power and joy of friendship.
Suellen Dainty has written two novels. The first, After Everything, was selected by the U.S chain, Target, as part of their Emerging Authors programme.
The second, The Housekeeper, reached Number 34 on the overall U.K. Amazon charts. Publishers Weekly described it as 'mesmerising' and the novelist Lisa Jewell said, 'I loved, loved, loved this book and cannot recommend it highly enough.' The Irish Times said, 'beautifully written, throbbing with unease and seductive menace...'
Before turning to fiction, she worked as a journalist for the Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian and the ABC. She then moved to London, where she worked as a producer for Sky News, a freelance journalist, a ghost writer for the chef, Michel Roux Jr, and a non-fiction author.
She lived in London and Somerset for thirty years and has now returned to her hometown, Sydney.