Jaffareadstoo is delighted to be hosting a stop on
The Day I Lost You Blog Tour
Please welcome back to the blog
~After reading The Day I Lost You I asked Fionnuala this question~
"...The major theme of The Day I lost You is about love and loss and the ways we all grieve for what we perceive to be lost. When you write about such an emotive subject - how much do you draw on your own life experiences and did you find this theme difficult to write about?..."
Love and loss are common themes
in my novels, though they appear in very different guises. And in writing about
relationships as I do; in wanting to peel back the layers and see what’s really
going on underneath, I think the truth is the writer has to offer a little
piece of themselves up.
I’ve been lucky enough never to suffer
either of the primary scenarios I’ve written about so far; a devastating
marital betrayal in my debut You, Me and
Other People or the potential loss of an extremely loved child in my second
novel The Day I Lost you - but in opting
to write about such life changing topics, I have to be prepared to dig deep. I
have to use the feelings I have felt during
whatever losses or grief I’ve personally faced. Sometimes, the only thing that
makes the right words appear on the page at the right time is your own life
experience.
I think love and loss are almost
inextricably linked, and find it almost impossible to write about one without
the other! I want the reader to believe in my characters and their story and real
life is such that it will always throw a curve ball at even the most successful
long-lasting love story. Real life is such that even in the most honest relationship,
there are moments where doubts arise and a little bit of something beautiful is,
perhaps, chipped away, lost. In exploring the loving bonds of couples, friends,
siblings, lovers its inevitable there will be a sprinkling of disappointment,
jealousy, or betrayal of trust - so it’s just a matter of time before some
feelings of loss and grief appear. One of life’s yin and yang certainties…
With The Day I Lost You, Jess is not only forced to face the potential
loss of her only twenty five year old daughter, Anna, and to raise her five
year old grandchild, Rose, but as facts unfold, the possibility that she never
really knew Anna at all. In writing the story, though I’m a mother to grown up
children, I still found it difficult to write some fairly heart-breaking scenes
–probably especially because I’m a
mother! The book questions the unconditional love we all feel for our children
and whether there is ever anything a child could do that would stop that flow
of love – very emotive stuff!
I think I’ve come to the
conclusion that, in my writing life, I like rooting under the bonnets of the
bonds we hold precious. I like examining what happens in our loving
relationships – the good and the bad. After all, we’re all flawed beings, but
often, it’s our flaws as well as our strengths that make us so very human.
Harper 22 September 2016 |
My thoughts about the book..
The implications of loss are
terrible to imagine, and for Jess, when she gets the awful news that her
daughter Anna is missing in a skiing accident she knows that her life is
irrevocably changed. Losing a child is every parent's worst nightmare, especially
when that child is also a parent, and even though bringing up Rose, her five
year old granddaughter is a mixed blessing, Jess can't help but long for the
news that Anna is alive and well and will soon be returning home to the family.
The story is beautifully written
and shares so generously the minutiae of Jess and Rose's daily life that we
come to love them and rejoice in their small triumphs and yet, we also sink
into compassionate despair as Jess reels from one bad situation to another. And
if we’re truly honest, we are relieved that our life is nothing like Jess’s and yet,
in a heartbeat, this scenario could easily happen to any one of us.
Loss can be a terribly
destructive force and Jess whilst superbly strong on the surface, is really
like the proverbial swan, calm and unruffled on top but underneath paddling
like fury. It is only with the help of her family and close friend, Theo, that
Jess can begin to make sense of what’s happening in her life, and yet, Theo the
troubled the guardian of so many secrets, is subsequently to be found facing
his own demanding demons.
I loved how the story looked at
the way that families interact and also of how relationships vary and alter
over time but what was also important was the understanding of just how brittle
are the bonds which tie us all together, and of how easily they can be broken
into millions of tiny pieces. The fragmented pieces of Jess’s life and the way
she deals with the hand that fate has dealt her, forms the heart and soul of the
novel and such is the emotional pull of the story that there were times when
sentiment got the better of me and I struggled to read without a great big lump
in my throat.
There is no doubt that this
talented author has a real skill with words and in this story which is rich in
emotion and filled with an abundance of well-loved characters she has, once
again, excelled herself.
Best Read with...A succulent chicken casserole and a glass of Irish coffee, smooth as silk and undeniably heavy on the alcohol..
Follow her on Twitter @fionnulatweets
The e-book is out now and available to buy from Amazon
The paperback is published on the 22nd September and will be available on Amazon and in all good book stores.
The e-book is out now and available to buy from Amazon
The paperback is published on the 22nd September and will be available on Amazon and in all good book stores.
Huge thanks to Fionnuala for her guest post today and for sharing her book with me and also to Jaime and the team at Harper for the invitation to be part of this blog tour
Blog Tour runs 19th - 30th September
Do visit the other stops on the tour for more exciting content
Blog Tour runs 19th - 30th September
Do visit the other stops on the tour for more exciting content
~***~
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