Fotografía de autor

Sinead Moriarty

Autor de The Baby Trail

19+ Obras 769 Miembros 29 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Series

Obras de Sinead Moriarty

The Baby Trail (2004) 184 copias
A Perfect Match (2005) 92 copias
From Here to Maternity (2006) 69 copias
In My Sister's Shoes (2007) 63 copias
Whose Life Is It Anyway? (2008) 55 copias
Mad About You (1800) 47 copias
Me and My Sisters (1722) 44 copias
The Secrets Sisters Keep (2014) 41 copias
This Child of Mine (2012) 35 copias
Pieces of My Heart (2010) 34 copias
The Way We Were (2015) 26 copias
Seven Letters (2019) 22 copias
Our Secrets and Lies (2018) 18 copias
The Good Mother (2017) 13 copias
About Us (2021) 9 copias
The New Girl (2021) 6 copias
Finding Hope (2023) 2 copias
Baby Trail Poster (2004) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Thanks for the Mammaries (2009) — Contribuidor — 24 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1971
Género
female

Miembros

Reseñas

I had a few issues with this book, the excessive use of people’s names, the pace of the story because of the subject matter and the unrealistic way the characters constantly said exactly how they felt. That being said I was interested enough to want to finish it and I would read another book by [a:Sinéad Moriarty|749455|Sinéad Moriarty|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1327226500p2/749455.jpg] but only if it crossed my path.
½
 
Denunciada
LiteraryReadaholic | otra reseña | Aug 13, 2023 |
An entertaining read about the trials of 3 sisters living 3 very different lives. How they end up reconnecting and supporting each other after years of taking different paths and holding different attitudes to life.
 
Denunciada
ElizabethCromb | otra reseña | Dec 21, 2022 |
Unfolding from multiple perspectives Yours, Mine, Ours by Sinead Moriarty explores the complications of blending families, especially when navigating step-parenting, and co-parenting.

There aren’t really any surprises in this book. Having fallen deeply in love, Anna and James are excited to be starting a new life together, and are sure that their respective children, 15 year-old Grace, 9 year-old Jack, and 14 year-old Bella will quickly embrace the merging of their lives. Neither are prepared when their dream of a happy family rapidly becomes a nightmare.

There’s plenty of drama as the children make life hard for Anna and James, putting a dent in their bubble of bliss. While Grace, a science geek, is willing to give the situation a chance, James’s spoilt daughter Bella doesn’t like sharing her father, and refuses to give Anna an inch. Jack, egged on by his immature father, Conor, is absolutely awful to James, and because of her guilt, Anna excuses his bad behaviour, which becomes a wedge between the couple.

I wasn’t very fond of Anna, though I had some sympathy for her, I found her lack of self awareness in several situations is irritating. James, a university professor, is a fairly bland character, though I admired his patience with Jack, and Anna. Conor, Anna’s ex, is an absolute douche who embraced every stereotype of toxic masculinity, while Bella’s mother, an ambitious career woman remarried to a wealthy hotelier, is focused on the wrong things when it comes to her daughter.

As you would predict, after tantrums, tears, break-ups and make-ups, it all works out in the end.

Moriarty writes well, there is genuine warmth, angst and humour in the story, but there was just not anything unique or particularly memorable about it for me.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
shelleyraec | Sep 6, 2022 |
Sinead Moriarty's new novel has three couples and one therapist's couch as the base for her new book, About Us.

Moriarty has cleverly chosen three couples of varying ages and stages of life, each with their share of issues and conundrums. So, there's a character or situation that any reader can connect with.

Ken and Ann are at the retirement stage of life, but it's not living up to what either had imagined. Niall and Alice have four children and not a lot of energy left for each other. Orla is carrying baggage from her past and has a medical issue. She meets Paul and adores him, but can their relationship thrive?

The therapist all three attend is an American who has set up practice in Ireland. I found this a bit odd. Do Irish therapists not tackle sexual issues? Sex does seem to be the biggest 'problem' brought to the office, although other issues are explored as well.

The chapters rotate through the three sets of characters. About Us is told from the women's viewpoints. I found myself most drawn to Alice, but the other two women are just as likable. I thought Moriarty did a good job portraying the women's inner thoughts, needs and wants. The therapist's advice seems reasonable and well written. But. Yes, for me there's a but. I grew tired of the therapist's scenes. While there is some what I assume is good advice (was an actual therapist consulted?), I found it becoming a bit 'textbooky' and repetitive for me. And that slowed down my finishing the book. I do think things could have been reconciled a bit sooner.

About Us was an okay read for me, but not a standout. And for me, not as funny as some have mentioned.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Twink | otra reseña | Aug 26, 2021 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
19
También por
1
Miembros
769
Popularidad
#33,095
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
29
ISBNs
104
Idiomas
10

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