Sarah Quinn is heartbroken when her mother Ava dies, she made Sarah promise if anything ever happened to her, that she would take care of her little sister Janette, older brother Joe and father Fred. Her dad's normally a jovial man, now he’s depressed and lost without Ava, he's started drinking, hardly ever home and Sarah’s left to do all the cooking, cleaning, has a job and she's run ragged. The only highlight is when the girls go to visit their aunty Irene, she’s a gardener in Suffolk and at Fettling House.
The siblings receive a big shock when Fred announces he’s marrying widow Mavis Swindel, she owns a house near the Great Edge and on the moors. Fred thinks Mavis is the bee’s knees, Joe, Sarah, Janette and don’t like her, something about her is odd and the boarding house is very rundown.
Mavis is the queen of manipulation, Fred’s oblivious to his wife’s faults and she extremely frugal and tight with her money. Sarah has a feeling about Mavis, not only is she lazy, she’s hiding something, with help she investigates her past, to say she’s shocked by what she discovers is an understatement, and how can she tell her father?
I received a digital copy of Daddy’s Girl by Josephine Cox and Gilly Middleton from HarperCollins UK and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. The well written narrative is really interesting and it looks at life in England in the early 1930's, where everyone in the family who could was expected to work, and some people thought higher education was a waste of time and money for girls?
I really liked Sarah’s and her aunty Irene’s characters, the lodgers at the boardinghouse and George the blacksmith. Sarah was selfless, she certainly never gave up, outsmarted her cunning step-mother, a wonderful and nostalgic historical saga and five stars from me.