Member Reviews

This is a beautifully crafted story of three generations of one family; their secrets, losses and sadness. The Scottish setting is integral to the tale, and evokes the atmosphere brilliantly. I thoroughly enjoyed it and will now read Kirsty Walk's first novel.

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When Iona MacMillan falls into Loch Doon in Galloway and drowns it causes more than ripples across the water. Every member of her family is drawn into the tragedy, and as their individual secrets unfold it reveals a family in crisis, yet one driven by love and commitment to each other. The House by the Loch is a family saga that begins in the 1950s when Walter MacMillan is swept off his feet by the glamorous Jean Thomson. Years later, the secrets that overshadowed their life together cast long shadows into the lives of their children and grandchildren. Walter is kind and gentle and loves his family dearly. His struggles with the past and how it affected his children provide the foundation for this story of family love and how we pull together when the chips are down. Beautifully and sensitively written. Very enjoyable.

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I wanted to like this book, but I found it a very unsatisfying read. Overly sentimental with characters who were complete caricatures. This book certainly didn't make me want to buy a house by a Scottish loch! Very disappointing.

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I would not normally ask for a book with this sort of description, but as it was Kirsty Walk, I thought I would give it a try. I could not finish it. It was massively over-descriptive and over-sentimental. The characters were bland and the plot was cliched. Disappointing. The low track record of celebrity novels is still intact.

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The House on the Loch by Kirsty Wark is an absolute delight. Her writing is evocative and although I’m not familiar with the area of Galloway in which the story is set, it really springs to life. Her skill also creates plausible characters and I found the diverse range of people in this tale fascinating and compelling. A few have secrets and quirks and I was keen to know how they were going to interact as events unfold.

Over a weekend, different generations of the same family come together for a celebration at properties set on the banks of Loch Doon. Bit by bit, the narrative exposes the past in flashback. Tensions and undercurrents between those at the party are clear from the outset, but the reasons are uncertain. I was swept along by a consummate storyteller whose tale of how the past reverberates over the decades kept me reading and I finished this in a couple of sessions. It’s effortless and understated, but a truly engrossing read. I loved it..

My thanks to the publisher for an early review copy via Netgalley.

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