An Unsuitable Match: An Emotional and Uplifting Story about Second Chances
By (Author) Joanna Trollope
Pan Macmillan
Pan Books
9th October 2018
4th October 2018
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.914
Paperback
336
Width 131mm, Height 197mm, Spine 22mm
228g
An Unsuitable Match, by number one bestselling author Joanna Trollope, is an uplifting story of love, family and second chances. 'Nobody writes about family tensions better than Joanna Trollope' - Good Housekeeping 'Why on earth, after all you've been through, all you've survived, all you've achieved, why do you want to get married' Rose Woodrowe has just got engaged to Tyler Masson - a wonderful, sensitive man who is head-over-heels in love with her. The only problem This isn't the first time for either of them, and their five grown-up children have strong opinions on the matter . . . Who to listen to Who to please Rose and Tyler are determined to get it right this time, but in trying to make everyone happy, can they ever be happy themselves
Trollope is an extremely assured writer, with a brilliant eye for detail and a finely tuned emotional intelligence ... she writes absorbing, wise stories that dramatise the dilemmas we face * Sunday Times *
With her compassion for her characters, Trollope cuts to the quick of family life, and the difference between men and women -- Fanny Blake * Woman & Home *
Joanna Trollope's novels address the issues and emotional journeys that face women today * Sunday Express *
Trollope writes about family relationships with intelligence and clear-eyed sympathy * The Times *
The unmatchable Joanna Trollope at her best * Choice *
The plot, knitting all the couples children together in a web of mutual interest, is clever and has some
unexpected outcomes. The scenes also abound with delicious contemporary tropes. An absorbing, slickly executed treat.
Joanna Trollope is the author of twenty highly acclaimed and bestselling novels, including The Rector's Wife, Marrying the Mistress and Daughters in Law. She was appointed OBE in 1996, and a trustee of the National Literacy Trust in 2012. She has chaired the Whitbread and Orange Awards, as well as being a judge of many other literature prizes; she has been part of two DCMS panels on public libraries and is patron of numerous charities, including Meningitis Now, and Chawton House Library. In 2014, she updated Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility as the opening novel in the Austen Project. An Unsuitable Match is her twenty-first novel.