The Unbroken Beauty of Rosalind Bone cover art

The Unbroken Beauty of Rosalind Bone

A powerful and intimate story set within the Welsh valleys, full of mystery and suspense

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The Unbroken Beauty of Rosalind Bone

By: Alex McCarthy
Narrated by: Rachel Isaac
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Summary

Brought to you by Penguin.

'Beautiful, incredibly painterly and full of breathtaking details. A devastating portrait of a particular place, which draws you in with its brutality and beauty' CARYL LEWIS, author of DRIFT

Tucked into the Welsh valleys and encircled by silver birch and pine, the village of Cwmcysgod may appear a quiet, sleepy sort of place. But beneath the surface, tensions simmer, hearts ache, and painful truths threaten to emerge.

Sixteen-year-old Catrin Bone knows only what she has been told. Now, she is beginning to question her small world, and a version of the past that seems to entrap and embitter her reclusive mother, Mary.

Mary had a sister once, a girl of unparalleled beauty. Why did she disappear from the village in a shroud of shame all those years ago - and where is she now?

Meanwhile the Clements brothers, skint and all out of hope, run rampant across the hills and lanes. And old Dai Bevel, whose frailty masks a dark history, dreams of a girl he used to know...

The sins of the past are approaching, for it takes a village: to raise a child, to bring down a woman, to hide something monstrous and to look the other way.

In this tender, sly, exquisitely wrought novella, a unique cast of characters give voice to their versions of the truth. But it is the story of Rosalind Bone, of her strength and of all that she has endured, that rises above the rest, shimmering with hope and possibility...

©2023 Alex McCarthy (P)2023 Penguin Audio

Family Life Fiction Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Mystery Small Town & Rural Women's Fiction Village Heartfelt
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Critic reviews

Bold storytelling, lyrical observations and a cast that includes an octogenarian drug dealer propel an atmospheric novella full of questions about female strength.
McCarthy... combines poetic lyricism with an unflinching social realism in a jagged little novel full of predatory male violence and feminine resilience.
Beautiful, incredibly painterly and full of breathtaking details. It is simultaneously dreamlike and nightmarish, funny and heartbreaking. A devastating portrait of a particular place, which draws you in with its brutality and beauty.
An incredibly assured debut, carefully observed, sparsely written yet full of heart. A quietly devastating read which lingers long after the final page
A wonderful novella, full of atmosphere and feeling
Small Things Like These meets Under Milk Wood - this slim but devastating novel captures an entire village, an entire world, and the many ways in which a woman can be trapped. A real gem.
176 pages of quiet brilliance
An exploration of our ability to defy and transcend such definitions, and the personal costs so often incurred along the way. A powerful, unusual debut
A simmering, atmospheric story about community, family and female resistance, in which not a word is out of place
A gripping and compelling tale . . . skilfully crafted . . . Each word is measured carefully. Short sentences betray a poetic brevity. She can be lyrical but does not shy from urban, brutal grittiness when she needs it.
All stars
Most relevant
This is a wonderfully written and poetic book and the narrator is wonderful. Haunting, sometimes dark and often moving. Highly recommended.

Beautifully written and moving

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Evocative, gripping and beautifully written. Very Welsh and the narrator fitted so well with the story.

Evocative and gripping.

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Hilarious and heartbreaking. A brilliantly told story with characters that draw you into the rawness of their lives.

Gripping and beautifully told

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I had no intention of finishing this in one sitting but I was absolutely compelled to do so. The richness of the images has left me awash - I feel as though if I move too quickly it will spill over my edges. So layered, nuanced and multi angled - and a vivid picture of rural Welsh life. I found myself thinking of Caradoc Evans 'My People' but here we find the warmth and healing so absent from that novel. Very highly recommended!

Absorbing, beautiful, brilliant...

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