Hide Her Name: The Four Streets Trilogy

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Hide Her Name: The Four Streets Trilogy

Hide Her Name: The Four Streets Trilogy

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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By completing your purchase, you agree to Audible's Conditions of Use and authorise Audible to charge your designated card or any other card on file. In the Four Streets in Liverpool, a dreadful murder has been committed, and 14-year-old Kitty Doherty is pregnant with the dead man’s child. HIDE HER NAME is the gripping sequel to Nadine Dorries's first bestseller, THE FOUR STREETS, shot through with darkness, but also filled with humour, warmth and charm. I thoroughly enjoyed the first book and read it in a couple of days and I became totally absorbed by the story and the characters.I thoroughly enjoyed it despite being thought provoking and bringing back memories of my Catholic school. The inevitable time spent by Kitty at the convent was brilliantly conveyed - but I still want to know what happened to the escapee. Captivating, phenomenal and touching' ― 23 Review Street --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.

But there's more than one reference to blue and white Panda police cars which did not appear on the streets until the mid 1960's.So many loose ends to tie up - well done to Nadine Dorries - I only wish I had a fraction of her talent! I almost gave up reading but later on it became very interesting and involved, it still jumped about but by this time I had become used to the drift of it and could keep track better. This story started very slowly and did jump from one set of people to another so was difficult to keep track of who was who.

Another epic tale of what can only be described as a series of unfortunate events to a group of innocent (mostly) and vulnerable people. And as for leaving Kitty in that awful place in the charge of those malicious nuns, well, I almost gave up on the book entirely!The characters are engaging, the streets scenes cinematic and the theme of the novel powerful' The Times . As a child, my Irish grandmother, Nellie Deane, would often whisk me away to her rural village on the west coast of Ireland and immerse me in the scent of raw peat and Holy Smoke. I find it hard to imagine how the families could have so many children whilst so poor, but then I am not Catholic.

The characters are engaging, the streets scenes cinematic and the theme of the novel powerful' The Times. The story makes for uncomfortable reading in places but is so well written you just have to read on. Glad I hadn't taken notice who the author was because if I had realised it was the MP I probably wouldn't have bothered reading it.It follows on from the four streets and it isn't just a story, it involves a typical Irish close knit community and the problems that go along side it! Fourteen-year-old Kitty Doherty, pregnant with the dead man's child, is a danger to everyone who needs to keep the secret. I promise if you get caught up in these peoples lives it will be just like your setting at the table gossiping with the rest of the neighborhood ladies about the comings and goings cause none of them miss a trick. As for the nuns and priests, even though there are often media reports of the wrongdoinsg of the priesthood, mostly in the past, I find it hard to believe in any civilised country the abbey nuns could have treated the girls so badly. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
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