Trisha Ashley writes a gloriously immersive festive read that is just perfect for getting into Christmas, full of humour, set in the fabulous snowy location of the Lancashire Moors. The romance elements are decidedly low key, although there is a comedy of errors when it comes to relationships between various characters in the novel. 36 year old Meg is a artist, a renowned portrait painter, living in London, whose best friend and flatmate, Fliss, has got married and moved out. She has suffered from a debilitating bout of pneumonia, left weakened and looking to convalesce. However, her plans are derailed when famous crime novelist and epigrapher, Clara Mayhem-Doome, commissions her to paint both her and her well known husband, poet Henry, insisting that Meg stay at their Victorian Gothic home, The Red House, where she will have the opportunity to take things easy.
Clara, a force of nature, invites Meg to experience a traditional family Christmas, something that Meg has never experienced before, having grown up in her beloved commune that served as her family in the Black Mountains of Wales where solstice and winter celebrations took precedence. Meg is surprised at how well she fits in with the vegetarian family, not to mention with the wonderful cook, Den, and Tottie, committed gardener and bee keeper. She is included in all the family Christmas traditions and rituals, and those of the local community. 8 year old Teddy provides the wonder and magic of Christmas seen through the eyes of children. Living close by are other family members, Sybil and her son, Mark, planning on turning his Underhill estate into a exclusive wedding venue, and the fly in the ointment, Lex, an unwelcome and unnerving reminder of a misunderstod past when he lost his young wife, Lisa, to cancer. He is not happy to see Meg, an unwanted presence, although he is mistaken about what he believes she did in his past, but is Meg going to be able to tell him the truth of what happened?
In a heartwarming Christmas story, Ashley gives us intrigue, brimful of family drama, whilst doing a splendid job of providing detailed rituals and pre-Christmas traditions, laced with paganism and local history. The highlights are the diverse range of characters, from Meg's adopted grandfather, River, to the likes of Den, Tottie, Clara, the self obsessed Rollo, an ex-boyfriend of Meg's and the hideous Piers. This is a wonderful read, of the spirit of Christmas, of family secrets, of the art of portrait painting, all set in a atmospheric location with the requisite snowy weather for the season. This is my first read of Trisha Ashley and I have to say that I really loved it. Many thanks to Random House Transworld for an ARC.