
Reading Ireland Month (or the #Begorrathon as it is affectionately known) will return for the tenth year in March 2025. This will be my fifth year. It is hosted by Cathy at 746 Books. Cathy is a supporter of everything Irish and a promoter of Irish culture. She has an amazing list on her page for suggestions of what to read and listen to. Check out her page and sign up!
If you post, tweet or use instagram, please use the hashtags #readingirelandmonth25 or #begorrathon25
I am slow this year putting together a list of reading material, but hoping to read several as well as listen to more. I am also looking for a movie to watch and will try to include a quick bit from Marc Gunn, my favorite musical Celt Father.
I jumped the gun and read Melanie Forde’s new novel, Guardian of the Crossroads and Carlene O’Connor’s novel You Have Gone Too Far in February, but you could still check them out.
In the meantime, consider this my first for the annual celebration, a novella, short, fast read by Maeve Binchy. The last one I read by this author was in March of 2023, A Week In Summer, a real short story.
Book Blurb:
Original short fiction by a beloved best-selling author on her best topic relationships. Charming novella from a masterful writer on the power of family secrets. Nan Ryan lives by herself at 14 Chestnut Road. When builders arrive to fix a deserted house next door, everyone expects the worst. But when the handsome workman looks to Nan to help unravel the mystery of the previous residents’ disappearance, a strange relationship develops. With family dynamics and crooked developers in the wings, things are about to get very messy…
My Review:
Written to promote adult literacy in Ireland, Binchy manages to develop engaging characters and wring as much emotion from them as possible in less than one hundred pages. Nan Ryan lives alone, her children with lives of their own, manage visits that are little more than welfare checks and then gone. Then a crew arrives to fix up the house next door that was deserted a couple years ago.
The foreman of the team, Derek Doyle, pops in for tea and as a relationship develops, Nan changes her family dynamics. The relationship between her three children has been somewhat strained. As her interest and activity in Derek develops, however, an interesting paradigm impacts all the characters.
And I applauded the change.
While I wasn’t too sure about the conclusion, it was a happy little ending, even if a bit fast and tidy. If you are a Binchy fan, you can read it on your commute home (unless you’re driving, of course).
Rosepoint Rating: Four Stars 
Book Details:
Genre: Two-Hour Travel Short Reads, British & Irish Literary Fiction, Romance Literary Fiction
Publisher: GemmaMedia
ASIN: B002A7WVNU
Print Length: 93 pages
Publication Date: May 1, 2009
Source: Local Library
Title Link(s):
The Author: Maeve Binchy was born in County Dublin and educated at the Holy Child convent in Killiney and at University College, Dublin. After a spell as a teacher she joined the IRISH TIMES. Her first novel, LIGHT A PENNY CANDLE, was published in 1982 and she went on to write over twenty books, all of them bestsellers. Several have been adapted for cinema and television, including TARA ROAD. Maeve Binchy received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the British Book Awards in 1999 and the Irish PEN/A.T. Cross award in 2007. In 2010 she was presented with the Bob Hughes Lifetime Achievement Award at the Bord Gáis Irish Book Awards by the President of Ireland. She was married to the writer and broadcaster Gordon Snell for 35 years, and died in 2012.
©2025 V Williams


