Glass Houses
'A devastatingly compelling new voice in literary fiction' - Louise O'Neill
by Francesca Reece
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Pub Date 23 May 2024 | Archive Date 10 Apr 2024
Headline | Tinder Press
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Description
'Through a dewy sheen of teen nostalgia, Reece deftly explores the weight of political events on individual lives. Her supple, visceral prose evokes North Wales in all its complexity, beautifully rendered in water, resin and sky'
Jessica Andrews, author of Saltwater and Milk Teeth
'Francesca Reece is a devastatingly compelling new voice in literary fiction'
Louise O'Neill, author of Asking For It and Idol
_______
Somewhere, in a box in Margot Yates' attic there's a video of Gethin by the lake at Ty Gwydr. He's young - nineteen, maybe twenty. It's late spring and dusk, and a low sun leaks white light into the horizon behind the dark fringe of trees. Olwen is filming. Gethin narrows his eyes at the camera. Her bodiless voice says to him, I love it here. He says, good. This place is ours.
Forester Gethin Thomas is struggling to make ends meet in his rural hometown in North Wales. Bright, charming, but unambitious, the thing that keeps him going is Ty Gwydr, a beautiful lakeside house that he keeps an eye on for absent English owners. The house has been empty for so long he's come to think of it as his own.
That is until the owners decide to sell, sending Geth into freefall. And when he discovers that Olwen, his first love who left him and their small town for a new life in London, has returned to North Wales with her husband, Geth and Olwen will find themselves pulled back into the past and what could have been - or still could be.
But soon mysterious messages start arriving at the house, and they must question whether this is the love story they thought it was, or whether there might be something altogether more sinister lurking beneath the surface.
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781472272249 |
PRICE | £20.00 (GBP) |
PAGES | 336 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
Somewhere, in a box in Margot Yates' attic there's a video of Gethin by the lake at Ty Gwydr. He's young - nineteen, maybe twenty. It's late spring and dusk, and a low sun leaks white light into the horizon behind the dark fringe of trees. Olwen is filming. Gethin narrows his eyes at the camera. Her bodiless voice says to him, I love it here. He says, good. This place is ours…….It's brilliant. It is well written, with a good plot and the characters are credible with plenty of twists and turns
Oh! I liked this one.
The first love story that ran through it, a near obsession really.
To be swept up and so utterly consumed by someone.... it was quite the read.
The background though, the house, the village, the trying times, it was all just fab.
I grew up in Wales, and have a fondness for any decently written book that uses places and phrases that bring back those memories. This one did perfectly.
I think I know Geth and Olwen, or if not them, people just like them.
Very very good.