A Terrible Kindness
Jo Browning Wroe
£9.99
Mr B's review
October 1966. Nineteen year-old William has just graduated as an embalmer with top marks, and is joining his family undertakers. While celebrating, however, they are interrupted by an emergency call for help at the Aberfan disaster. William volunteers. Over the next few days, he helps identify and embalm the bodies of the hundred children and their teachers killed by the disaster. Sometimes all he can use to try and identify the bodies is part of a shirt – a headband – or a lock of hair. This isn’t a novel about Aberfan, though. Not really. It’s a novel about PTSD that spirals back through William’s childhood and into his future as he carries the weight of those few days in October 1966 and tries to make sense of a tragedy that took so much from so many.
Description
*INSTANT SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER*
*AN OBSERVER DEBUT OF 2022*
*AS FEATURED ON FRONT ROW*
‘Incredibly moving. Exquisitely crafted.” BONNIE GARMUS, author of Lessons in Chemistry
‘Moving… We were consumed by this story of healing and hope.’ Woman & Home
‘A crescendo of pain and beauty that took my breath away. Brava!’ MIRANDA COWLEY HELLER, author of The Paper Palace
‘I LOVE IT! Utterly and completely brilliant.’ JOANNA CANNON, author of A Tidy Ending
‘It’s a long time since I’ve read a debut novel that moved me so much.’ RACHEL JOYCE, Miss Benson’s Beetle
‘It’s utterly magnificent and had to pull car over twice to cry. Intricate cobweb of love, family and friendship, so delicately wrought. Beautiful. A masterclass in character.’ VERONICA HENRY
When we go through something impossible, someone, or something, will help us, if we let them . . .
It is October 1966 and William Lavery is having the night of his life at his first black-tie do. But, as the evening unfolds, news hits of a landslide at a coal mine. It has buried a school: Aberfan.
William decides he must act, so he stands and volunteers to attend. It will be his first job as an embalmer, and it will be one he never forgets.
His work that night will force him to think about the little boy he was, and the losses he has worked so hard to forget. But compassion can have surprising consequences, because – as William discovers – giving so much to others can sometimes help us heal ourselves.
What readers are saying:
***** ‘One stunning read to remember.’
***** ‘Beautifully written . . . I would recommend this book to all.’
***** ‘Utterly heartbreaking and uplifting . . . I loved it.’
***** ‘Tremendous.’
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