Chasing Angels
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
“[A] winning tale of struggle and hard-won reward” featuring “sharp-tongued, viciously funny Kathy Kelly” from the bestselling author of Finding Peggy (Publishers Weekly).
Kathy Kelly, born in the heart of Glasgow’s East End, comes from a family torn apart by conflict. She grows up with a sharp wit and a quick temper, constantly challenging those who cross her: her reproving grandmother; Con, her hard-drinking father; even the local priest—Kathy takes no prisoners. But at least she copes, unlike her older brother Peter, who disappears as fast as he can.
Kathy also escapes—to the Highlands. Here she finds work and a home with the Macdonalds, an eccentric, easy-going couple. But Con’s death drags Kathy back to Glasgow, where she is forced to look at things afresh, at past events and the people she thought she knew so well, and begin the search for her missing brother, a search which will result in an extraordinary, devastating discovery.
“The overall effect is of being at your auntie’s, of listening to an enthusiastic storyteller, of the fascination of taking a microscope to seemingly ordinary lives, seemingly mundane situations, and bringing them into dramatic focus.” —Scotland on Sunday
“Henderson writes from a position of uncompromising humanity. A strong, atmospheric writer with gifts of insight, she has a sharp and tarry black humor, so while she attacks the objects of her wrath, she leavens the battle with a running current of dark and infectious wit.” —Sunday Herald
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
At the start of this undisciplined but winning tale of struggle and hard-won reward, sharp-tongued, viciously funny Kathy Kelly is back visiting Moncur Street, after years living in the Scottish Highlands. Alcoholism has finally killed Old Con, her irresponsible, maudlin father, and Kathy is staying in her native Glasgow just long enough to collect her mother's life insurance money from her lifelong enemy, Father Frank McCabe. Her memories of her early life in Glasgow are not pleasant: Only her relationship with her beloved mother, Lily, redeems her difficult, poverty-stricken childhood, and Lily's death in a senseless piecework factory fire when Kathy was 15 completely devastate her. Later, engaged out of guilt to the stolid Jamie Crawford, an unimaginative childhood friend, Kathy secretly becomes pregnant. After a heartbreaking miscarriage, she sets out for the Highlands. There she finds solace with Bunty and Angus MacDonald, an eccentric elderly couple whose genuine love for her and one other are unlike anything she has ever known before. This wonderful interlude is eventually interrupted by the MacDonalds' deaths, and her incendiary relationship with their peripatetic son Rory flares. Another writer might have been tempted to find romance here, but Henderson, in a lovely turn, allows these two prickly characters to age together in a happily irritable, platonic relationship. Kathy is a severely damaged character, but she is able to parlay her past into something of value while her life story is not extraordinary, it is unquestionably worth telling. The novel suffers from its lack of structure and conventional resolution, but Henderson's (The Holy City) storytelling capabilities and Kathy's richly humorous voice the voice of a survivor save the day.