Available Formats
The Angels of Lovely Lane
By (Author) Nadine Dorries
1
Head of Zeus
Head of Zeus
1st July 2016
UK Airports ed
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Short-listed for Parliamentary Book Awards: Best Fiction by a Parliamentarian 2016
Paperback
336
Width 145mm, Height 228mm
A warm and engrossing novel about three young student nurses at St Angelus Hospital in Liverpool during the early 1960s.
It is 1953 and five very different girls are arriving at the nurses' home in Lovely Lane, Liverpool, to start their training at St Angelus Hospital.
Dana has escaped from her family farm on the west coast of Ireland. Victoria is running away from a debt-ridden aristocratic background. Beth is an army brat and throws her lot in with bitchy Celia Forsyth. And Pammy has come from quite the wrong side of the tracks in Liverpool.
The world in which they now find themselves is complicated and hierarchical, with rules that must be obeyed. Everyone has their place at St Angelus and woe betide anyone who strays from it.
But when an unknown girl is admitted, after a botched late abortion in a backstreet kitchen, a tragedy begins to unfold which will rock the world of St Angelus to its foundations.
Can't wait for the next one THE CHILDREN OF LOVELY LANE is out now!
What people are saying about THE ANGELS OF LOVELY LANE:
'Nadine Dorries's writing is sparkling and vibrant, her books are a joy to read'
'The book was like a dream difficult to put down'
'You feel as if you know the characters personally!'
'Enthralling read, can't wait to read more'
'As heart-warming as it is heartbreaking, this novel is unputdownable' Sunday Express.
'The characters are engaging ... and the theme of the novel powerful' The Times.
'A riveting tale packed full of history, love and deceit' OK! Magazine.
'Captivating, phenomenal and touching' 23 Review Street.
'A multi-layered book [with] gorgeous sentences and sensational plotlines' With Love for Books.
'It was a time when desperate women sought back-street abortions and bigoted attitudes were rife, and the book addresses some of the beliefs thatt they struggled with, both in their own lives and those of their patients and colleague' Woman Alive.
Nadine Dorries grew up in a working-class family in Liverpool and spent a great deal of time in Mayo with her Irish grandmother. She trained as a nurse and has been the MP for Mid-Bedfordshire since 2005. She has three daughters.