If, like me, you adore penguins, then Hazel Prior's moving and hopeful novel will be the perfect read, it has oodles of charm which had me dissolving into a gooey puddle with its joyous penguins and one special baby penguin in particular that manages to knit together the humans that take care of him. 86 year old Veronica McCreedy is a very wealthy woman living in a coastal mansion, The Ballahays, in Ayrshire. She has been lonely and alone for a long time, with no family, divorced from a serial philanderer, her only human contact with Eileen who comes in to clean and do what is necessary. Veronica is contemplating her life and what do with her money, when a grandson is unearthed, Patrick, living in Bolton. Patrick's life has fallen apart, his girlfriend, Lynette, has left him for a racist brickie, leaving him gobsmacked, having to move, and financially poorer. However, Veronica's disappointment in Patrick knows no bounds when they encounter each other.
Veronica has very little truck with the modern world of pointless, vacuous celebrities, she is stubborn, determined, and seeking a mission to do good. Her one interest is wildlife documentaries, finding herself getting caught up with Robert Saddlebow's 'The Plight of Penguins', specifically the need to research the Adelie penguins of Locket Island in the Antarctic. A locket has a strong personal resonance for her, and she contacts the tiny 3 person team on the island, promising funding and requires them to provide living accommodation for 3 weeks. She takes absolutely no notice of their frantic efforts to dissuade her, for like the penguins, Veronica is feisty, persistent, and an unstoppable force of nature. Veronica in her youth was full of life, with a big heart, but losing her parents in WW2 at the tender age of 14, the loss of her baby, and her marriage drained her faith in people.
Cracks in her facade begin to appear as she connects with Terry with her penguin blog, and Pip, the baby penguin she saves, and perhaps, just perhaps, she has misjudged her weed smoking grandson, Patrick? Prior's writes a pitch perfect story with a central protagonist, Veronica, who will tug at your heartstrings, in a narrative where we learn of her past traumas during WW2 through the journal she gives Patrick. As she begins to question her harsh judgement of Patrick, and he gets to know his grandmother through her wartime years journal, their relationship with each other grows stronger, cemented by Pip, the other penguins and the lovely Terry. A gloriously quirky and life affirming story of hope that I cannot see anyone being able to resist, after all, who does not love penguins??? Many thanks to Random House Transworld for an ARC.