Her Father’s Daughter by Cathy Mansell
Romantic Suspense
published by Tirgearr Publishing
Buy links:
Set in the 1950s Ireland , twenty-year-old Sarah Nolan leaves her
home in Dublin after a series of arguments. She has taken
a job in Cork city with the Gazette, a move her parents’
strongly oppose. With her limited budget, she is forced to take unsavoury
lodgings where the property owner cannot be trusted. Soon after she settles in, Sarah befriends
sixteen-year-old Lucy, who has been left abandoned and pregnant.
Dan Madden is a charming and flirtatious
journalist who wins Sarah’s heart. Can
Sarah trust him to keep his word when he promises to end his relationship with
Ruth?
It is when her editor asks to see her birth
certificate that she discovers some long-hidden secrets. Her parents’ behaviour continues to baffle
her and her problems with Dan and Lucy multiply.
Will Dan stand by Sarah in her time of
need? Will Sarah be able to help Lucy
keep her baby? Or, will the secrets destroy Sarah and everything she dreams of
for her future.
Teaser Excerpt:
Sarah glanced towards the far end of the platform as she boarded her train and wondered if her parents would appear and try to drag her back home. Being at odds with the two people she loved most in the world upset her. She hauled her suitcase into an empty compartment.
Sliding the door behind her, she lowered the window and had one last look along the empty platform. The couple she imagined were not the mother and father she had loved and understood all these years, but the man and woman they had become when she had so joyously told them her news. It was difficult for a woman to get into journalism and Sarah found it hard to believe that she’d done it. She hoisted her case onto the overhead rack, and slumped into the nearest seat.
Would they ever forgive her for going off like this? Her parents were the reason that she had stayed in Dublin so long. Then, there was her long-standing friendship with twenty-two year old Derek who worked for the Telegraph Office. He had wished her well, and had tried talking to her father. He wouldn’t listen.
The train began to move, great sobs of steam filled her ears - and her heart, too. She hauled on the leather strap to close the window against smoke and smut. Now, as, she watched the city and the countryside she loved slipping away behind her, she felt overcome with disappointment. This wasn’t how she’d imagined it would be leaving home for the very first time. To be at such odds with her parents was something she had never experienced before. Never.
A job on the Cork Gazette was a dream come true, so why were they so desperate for her to stay in Dublin? She had been shocked to the core by the speed and ferocity the row with her parents had taken, and she was left with no choice but to withdraw her savings from the post office to make this journey. She knew her insecurity and her lack of financial support was going to make it hard to carry on, but she vowed there and then to manage on a shoestring until she received her first pay packet.
Growing up, she’d had many disagreements with them, like the time she wanted to be a girl guide and they wanted her to take up Irish dancing. Thoughts of having her hair in ringlets every week had been a major factor, but she had won them over in the end. Then, when she was fifteen, she had wanted expensive high heels to go ballroom dancing with her friends.
‘Time enough for shoes like that when you’re older,’ her mother had ruled.
But this was different. She was twenty now, and journalism was what she had been trained for. Why weren’t they pleased for her?
Trying not to think about the blazing row, she reached for her handbag. Her mass of chestnut hair fell across her face as she re-read the letter from the editor, Neil Harrington. In spite of everything, a smile brightened her face. As she planned the economies she would make, the click clack of the train caused her eyelids to droop, and she fell asleep.
About the Author:
I have been
writing romantic fiction for the past ten years and Her Father’s Daughter is my
second published book. I cannot remember where the idea for the plot sprung
from, except to say that the theme and plot was forming in my head long before I
began writing it. I knew I would set my story in Ireland during the 1950s, a time when jobs were
hard to come by.
A certain amount
of research was inevitable if I was to do justice to the plot. It took me
across the sea to Dublin and Cork City many times in order to research my story. I still have family living in Dublin , so it was a good excuse for a visit.
Her Father’s
Daughter was one of my favourite books to write. Set in a time when women were
oppressed and a child born outside marriage was a mortal
sin and mother and
child were treated as a social outcast.
I hope readers who
enjoyed reading Shadow Across the
Liffey, a 2013 finalist in the Romantic Novelists’ Association’s Joan Hessayon
Award, will also enjoy Her Father’s Daughter.
5 comments:
I'm looking forward to chatting with
authors and readers here today.
Thanks for yesterday Dawn.
Cathy
Have a great day, Cathy. Her Father's Daughter is a wonderful story. Sarah is a strong heroine and the perfect character for this story.
Great story Cathy! Have a grand day!
Thanks Troy, it's been a good two days.
Thanks for commenting.
Hi Dawn - thanks a million for having me as your guest yesterday. I enjoyed
being here.
And thanks to those who managed to put on a comment. I had emails from
authors who said they couldn't get to leave a comment on the site.
It has happened to me on occasions so I know how they feel.
Have a goo day!
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