In this debut, for fans of J. Courtney Sullivan and Mary Beth Keane, three adult sisters grapple with a shared tragedy over a Thanksgiving weekend spent in their childhood home, navigating complex relationships and old tensions.
It’s been years since the three Ryan sisters were all home together at their family’s beloved house on the eastern shore of Long Island. Two decades ago, their lives were upended by an accident on their brother Topher’s a friend’s brother was killed, the lawsuit nearly bankrupted their parents, and Topher spiraled into a depression, eventually taking his life. Now the Ryan women are back for Thanksgiving, eager to reconnect, but each carrying a heavy secret. The eldest, Cait, still holding guilt for the role no one knows she played in the boat accident, rekindles a flame with her high school crush, Topher’s best friend and the brother of the boy who died. Middle sister Alice’s been thrown a curveball threatening the career she’s restarting and faces a difficult decision that may doom her marriage. And the youngest, Maggie, is finally taking the risk to bring the woman she loves home to her devoutly Catholic mother. Infusing everything is the grief for Topher that none of the Ryans have figured out how to carry together.
When Cait invites a guest to Thanksgiving dinner, old tensions boil over and new truths surface, nearly overpowering the flickering light of their family bond. Far more than a family holiday will be ruined unless the sisters can find a way to forgive themselves—and one another.
Heather Aimee O’Neill is the Assistant Director of the Sackett Street Writers’ Workshop, and teaches creative writing at CUNY Hunter College. An excerpt from her novel When The Lights Go On Again was published as a chapbook by Wallflower Press in April 2013. Her poetry chapbook, Memory Future, won the University of Southern California's 2011 Gold Line Press Award, chosen by judge Carol Muske-Dukes. Her work was shortlisted for the 2011 Pirate’s Alley Faulkner-Wisdom Writing Award and has appeared in numerous literary journals. She is a freelance writer for publications such as Time Out New York, Parents Magazine and Salon.com, and is a regular book columnist at MTV’s AfterEllen.com.
if you’re looking for a book with a thanksgiving plot going into this week and next, here you go! 3 sisters back home for the holidays, each holding onto their own secrets and in turn, drama! i feel like this is one of those books i’ll remember that i read it, but the plot + characters will be forgotten lol. just a bit slow for me, but still enjoyed it!
Nothing like going to gathering, being overstimulated, overwhelmed, but also being able to exit without a goodbye. No long drawn out farewells. That's my kind of party. This story, not so much.
Three sisters are brought together at Thanksgiving. They have not seen each other in years. There are secrets they don’t discuss but we know their brother committed suicide and a friend of his died.
There is a lot of drama but not a lot of action. Sisters behaving badly might have been a better title. It flatlined for a generous portion of the story and managed to get a faint pulse toward the end but by then I had officially announced it: dead. Not for me. 3⭐️
Three adult sisters gather with family to spend Thanksgiving in their childhood home on the eastern shores of Long Island. Their parents have aged, the house needs obvious repair, and tensions hang low in the air—the accident two decades ago altered their lives forever. Carrying the grief and loss is complicated by secrets, regrets, and unresolved resentments between them. The Ryan Family has a great deal to unpack this holiday...
The Irish Goodbye is a beautifully written and engaging story about a complicated family. I first fell in love with the cover, and when I began reading, I grew attached to each character. This is a family I could spend more time with, but I'm satisfied with how things lie between them.
An immersion reading experience, the audiobook is narrated by Kristen Sieh, who does a phenomenal job of bringing these complicated characters to life. Her skills truly enhanced my experience, and it's an audiobook I most likely will listen to again.
The Irish Goodbye is an impressive debut, and every bit as addictive as a Mary Beth Keane novel. I'm always in awe of an author who writes a book, this one at only 288 pages, that is as rich as much longer ones. This story is brief, yet complete, and I'm looking forward to what's next from Heather Aimee O'Neill!
4.75⭐
Thank you to Henry Holt and Co., Macmillan Audio, and Heather Aimee O'Neill for the gifted DRC and ALC through NetGalley. This is my honest and voluntary review.
A story about three sisters who reunite after many years apart. The Ryan family lives on Long Island and all three daughters come home for a family Thanksgiving with their elderly parents. Everyone has a secret and the family suffers from unresolved grief. There are many serious issues in the novel but I felt like nothing was deeply explored. This was just not as compelling as I thought it would be. It was still a decent debut and the author is promising. I listened to the audiobook and the narrator was very good. An appropriately titled story!
This is a Read with Jenna Book Club selection for the month of October 2025
This was a beautiful debut novel set on Long Island, where the Ryan’s own a large Victorian home on the eastern shore, it has been in their family for generations. Two decades ago, their lives were upended when a tragic accident happened on the oldest child Topher’s boat. Since then, daughters moved away, a tragedy happens with Topher… secrets were withheld… The parent aged, and grandchildren were born. They are now coming together now for a Thanksgiving dinner you won’t forget . A great cast of characters, a story of family, grief, and forgiveness. It was very hard to put this novel down at any point and I just wanted to stay with this family for a while longer!
Thank you to Netgalley and Henry Holt & Company for the free ARC!
An Irish Goodbye is the act of slipping away quietly from a social gathering. The Irish Goodbye is a touching debut about a family where everyone has a secret. Three adult sisters return to their parents for Thanksgiving. Things haven’t been right since an accident on their brother’s boat led to a death. Then their brother committed suicide. This was a realistic novel despite the sheer volume of issues. Everyone who has multiple kids has been subject to those times when there’s something going on in everyone’s life that impacts a gathering. Each of the characters felt fully developed with their own strengths and weaknesses. I could understand their issues even when I didn’t agree with their actions. The book has multiple themes, including parenting, self-care especially in contrast to religious beliefs, marital roles and aging parents. The writing is beautiful and the one phrase that really hit me was “the emotional labor of caregiving”. Things did tie up a little too neatly at the end but it didn’t hamper my enjoyment of the story. I listened to this and Kriste Sieh did a great job as the narrator. I recommend this for fans of Ann Patchett, Celeste Ng and Angie Kim. My thanks to Netgalley and Macmillan Audio for an advance copy of this book.
A generational family drama that was just a “fair” read to me. There was nothing different or outstanding. The author took on so many controversial topics in 270 pages and yet none really touched me deeply or were explored beyond a surface level. There were no words of wisdom, and no quotes that stuck out to me. I struggled with the pacing and it just a book about characters who are really not admirable people.
I expected more but did finish, as it was a super quick read.
3.5 rounded to 4 for GR! what a juicy messy family drama! Jenna’s picks are always fun to read and this was no exception. at under 300 pages, it’s quick and grabs you right away which was exactly what i was looking for right now.
if you liked BLUE SISTERS or THESE SUMMER STORMS or even THE PAPER PALACE, you’ll like this. very similar vibes—family drama, siblings being messy and arguing, parents all tangled into it, a twist that could change everything, etc. to me, this wasn’t as good as those 3 (some of my favorites tbh) but it was very similar and that’s why i enjoyed it.
this story follows a family that all comes back together for thanksgiving and as it usually does, drama ensues. and more than one of the siblings is carrying a secret… 👀
what i loved in this one was the multiple POVs of each sibling. Cait was probably my favorite and brought the drama lol! i wish we got a POV from one parent or even the brother to bring it full circle and give one other perspective.
the setting was also a vibe—think THESE SUMMER STORMS with a huge mansion on the east coast.
i also would have loved an epilogue 5 years later to see where everyone was.
all in all, a fun easy read and it helped me through a reading slump so for that i recommend!
Available Now This is a beautiful family drama. The Ryan sisters are back together for Thanksgiving holiday they haven’t seen each other in years. Years ago, there was a tragedy, when their brother’s friend was killed in a boating accident. Cait invites a friend to the Thanksgiving feast. He happens to be the brother of the boy that was killed in the tragedy Old wounds are opened as the sisters share their stories. This story is told in alternating POV’s between the sisters. Cait, Maggie and Alice. Each sister has a story to tell as secrets are revealed. Emotions run high. This is a heartfelt debut book that was beautifully written. It just drew me right in. I loved the setting on Long Island, as I live there. I enjoyed the relationships the sisters had loved reading about the drama. Thank you to Henry Holt and NetGalley for this advanced readers copy. Highly recommended.
A family comes together at their family home at Thanksgiving, a holiday designed for happiness and family bonding. However this family has issues that keep each of the remaining daughters and their mother seemingly on tenterhooks.
The suicide death of their brother, twenty years ago, after a boating accident that took the life of another, has in bedded itself into all of them. Years have separated them and this is the first time they have been together in a long time.
Cait, the eldest, has to come to terms with her growing affection for the brother of the young man who died on that boat. After his family sued her family nearly into bankruptcy, how will they react to her new flame?
Alice has been moving on, successful in her new career when something is throwing a roadblock into her ambitions, especially since her husband opposes her decision and that might mean the end of their marriage.
The youngest sister, Maggie, a gay young woman, is bringing her current partner to the dinner. How will her strict Irish Catholic mother react?
Unless the girls and their mother can come together this family might be doomed.
the setup… It’s 2015 and the Ryan family is gathering at the Port Haven, New York home to celebrate Thanksgiving with Parents Robert and Nora as the hosts. Daughter Cait is flying in from London with her twins; Alice and husband Kyle live nearby but will stay overnight with their two sons; and youngest Maggie is coming with her new girlfriend Isabel, a first. It’s been twenty-five years since the family was rocked by the death of their son Topher’s friend’s younger brother in an accident on his boat and the lawsuit that crippled them. And, it’s been eleven years since Topher’s suicide. Both events still weigh heavily on them all and each child is bringing new secrets and baggage with them.
the heart of the story… An Irish goodbye is defined to be a stealthy exit from a party without fuss or fanfare, a secret escape. Cait is burdened by guilt associated with what happened the day Topher’s friend died. Alice has just learned something that will threaten her burgeoning design career and marriage. Maggie is keeping a secret from Isabel that could end their relationship before it gets started. All just want to quietly slip away to just deal. Combined it was a dish that threatens to be served up hot on this holiday.
the narration… It’s all about the storytelling and Kristen Sieh did an outstanding job of that, including expert voice distinctions. She had me riveted.
the bottom line… Family drama at its finest without a lot of…well, drama. It’s all in the unsaid as everyone tries to quietly find a way out of dealing with their issues, even though the stress of it all overlayed everything. I liked these people, even Cait who comes across a bit self absorbed but those two deaths left a permanent mark on all of them that they never dealt with head on. This is a fascinating study of how a tragedy shaped a good family and a defining holiday where it all rises to the surface.
Calling all readers that love family dramas! The Irish Goodbye sits just under 300 pages and while I wish we could stay with this family for a bit longer, it packed a punch with it's story and characters. I think what's tricky in this genre is that either the book needs to be 600 pages to really capture the depth of the family relationships and intricacies, but the author needs to know how to develop each moment in a single sentence for the under 300 pager dramas to actually WORK. Stories like Signal Fires by Dani Shapiro and The Bright Years by Sarah Damoff come to mind of family dramas under 300 pages that accomplished this. However, the Tracey Lange books are examples of the under 300 pagers that unfortunately don't work. I think the Irish Goodbye sits in the middle where we probably needed 50-75 pages more and a bit more emotion in the writing for it to really stand out as a 5 star winner.
5 stars. Loved loved loved. Talk about an engrossing epic story that is raw and emotional. Its left a major impression at a short 288 pages and is so PERFECTLY titled. “THE IRISH GOODBYE” is a well-crafted family drama with a touch of mystery that is richly layered with grief, loss and regret that spans from a past tragedy two decades before. As the Ryan family + one guest, gather round for Thanksgiving at the family home on Long Island.. secrets spill, resentments flare, and old wounds are opened as the three adult Ryan daughters share their stories that are told in their own POV’s. They reveal hardships from the past to problems now and the effects it’s had on them. Can this dysfunctional family heal? It amazes me how O’Neill has the ability to bring her characters to life, to actually feel their emotions, frustrations and pain.. and for this to be a debut is truly outstanding. Highly recommend this. And the audio, fantastic. ❥ Pub. 9/30/25 🎧
Thanks to Macmillan Audio for the gifted ALC via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.
I really liked The Irish Goodbye, a family drama set over a holiday weekend. Adult sisters Cait, Alice, and Maggie, reunite at their parents’ house for Thanksgiving. Each sister is dealing with their own secrets and challenges, and reflecting on the past. Together again with their parents, kids, and significant others, it all comes to light.
The Irish Goodbye has some heavy topics, along with drama. I flew through this book. A good read any time, but especially for Fall — 4.5 stars
4⭐️ I enjoyed this family drama about the Ryan family coming together in their family home on Long Island for Thanksgiving.
Generations of Ryan’s have called the large Victorian home, but now the aging parents are there alone after their daughters have moved away and their only son Topher died. A tragedy has haunted the family for years and filled their lives with grief, secrets, and longing.
Alice and her husband Kyle and their 2 sons still in the area, feel the burden on them in the care giving and home upkeep. Cait mother of twins, newly divorced and visiting from London. Maggie in a new relationship with Isabel, coming home to introduce her to the family. And the ever present memories of Topher and the day that changed the family forever.
Beautifully written with engaging, complicated characters I wanted to keep reading about this family and follow them all forward into the future!
Thanks to NetGalley and Henry Holt & Co for the eARC in exchange for my honest review.
THE IRISH GOODBYE By Heather Aimee O’Neill Narrated by Kristen Sieh
A big-hearted family saga filled with secrets and regrets, this authentic debut set on Long Island follows the Ryan sisters—Alice, Cait, and Maggie—as they return to their childhood home for Thanksgiving weekend. Along with their families, they bring decades of emotional baggage. A long-buried tragedy that was never truly resolved hangs over them all. As tensions rise and long-hidden truths come to light, will this holiday fracture their bond for good—or offer a chance to forgive and heal?
The exploration of each well-developed character was done beautifully in this just-under-300-page novel. It’s well written and I was fully invested in these characters—their struggles, flaws, and growth. I’m looking forward to more from this gifted storyteller. The Irish Goodbye explores themes of sisterhood, marriage, grief, and forgiveness.
Kristen Sieh captures the emotional depth of the story beautifully.
Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the ALC. Publishing September 30, 2025
Great title and a decent family drama. The story mostly unfolds over a Thanksgiving visit, where three sisters who haven’t spoken in years return home carrying their own mix of grief, guilt, and unresolved stuff. The setup is solid, but some of the flashbacks felt a bit misplaced, and a few conversations read younger than the characters actually are. I also wanted a little more depth from each sister to really feel their emotional weight.
Overall, it’s a fine family story with some nice moments, just not quite nuanced enough for me to rate it higher than 3 out of 5. It’s a debut novel and I would still seek out O’Neill’s future works.
I received a free copy of, The Irish Goodbye, by Heather Aimee O"Neill, from the publisher and Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Cait, Alice, and Maggie, are the Ryan sisters, who have been apart for awhile after an incident with their brother Topher. This year will be the first time they are all together in over two decade. This was not a light read at all.
✨REVIEW: The Irish Goodbye by Heather Aimee O’Neill✨
🎧2.75⭐️
I wasn’t going to post my feelings about this book. I realize that my worldview might not be the same as yours, and this book might work for you. But I’ve gotten DMs asking specifically what I didn’t like. So here goes. SPOILER FREE!
😌First, here’s what I DID appreciate: -Strong writing that made me feel invested in the story right away -Great audio narration -So much complexity wrapped into a relatively short book! -The idea of looking back on life events with regret and choosing what burdens to let go of
🤔But… I can’t abide stories that treat children as a burden rather than a blessing. Two of the three sisters in the story treat kids as a major interruption in their lives and to their personal desires. Stick with me here- I’m not talking about acknowledging that parenting is difficult or that having kids changes your life. I’m talking about choosing your own personal (current) wants above what’s best for your children, spouse or family; neglecting right and wrong to do what you want.
AND (here’s the kicker)- acting like those choices will never be a source of regret or problem in your relationships.
This message was mostly subtle, but it was there. And I will NEVER recommend a book that advances that type of messaging.
🥰If you hold a different worldview or enjoyed books like Sandwich, this might be for you.
⚠️Profanity: 3/5 (I can’t remember the exact amount, but I know it was at least occasional.)
Sexual: 3/5 (some detail, including a same sex relationship and a girl losing her virginity)
Other: Some triggers are spoilers. DM me for specifics.
Physical copy gifted to me by the publisher. Thanks 👍🏼 😊. All my opinions are my own. ----
Haunting, organic, grounded, emotional with surprises and secrets 🙊and guilt in some form that everyone is holding on to.
Fights and misunderstandings abound but the drama isn't drawn out and feels realistic, not over the top.
I love a good family drama/saga story that isn't my own (my own family would be enough for a book or two). It's interesting to see how different family dynamics work and how it can affect people in ways they can and can't/won't be able to see and how sometimes you feel stuck between the past and the present without knowing how to move forward and get unstuck.
These people felt so real to me, it felt like I was there with them observing everything.
There's a certain energy in the atmosphere of al this but it never drags you down and holds you to the carpet. There's love and some humor to go along.
I wanted to keep going with these people and see how everything turned out (and give them many hugs) but it also ended on a hopeful note that gives me the feeling they will be okay :).
Have my fingers crossed for them all.
Would recommend, to me its both slice of life and character study, if that makes sense.
This was a very good and well written family drama. Sisters born to an Irish Catholic mother and their American father come home to their parents for Thanksgiving. The absence of a brother who died of suicide years earlier still lays heavy on the family, and each sister is grappling with things going on in life. The story is told from each sisters POV, and each of them is a well developed character. My only critique, is that I would have loved to have the Irish-American Catholic mother's POV as well. The parents are aging and care falls to the daughter who stayed home. There is a lot that anyone who has been part of a family will connect with. Really enjoyed it and will look forward to what she writes next!
This book follows a dysfunctional family over a Thanksgiving weekend. We follow the three daughters Cait, Alice, and Maggie.
Cait throughout the vast majority of this book is selfish and really only thinks about her wants. Even in the flashback chapters she was selfish so I really couldn't stand her throughout most of this book, but she did manage to make me like her when she stood up for her sister... and then immediately make me dislike her again about a page later. So she's kinda an awful person but a pretty decent sister.
Alice is the push over and people pleaser, she stretches herself paper thin trying to do everything and be there for everyone. And also greatly resents her sisters mainly Cait because they moved away and they haven't had to sacrifice as much. When Alice eventually starts thinking about her own self interests I was rooting so hard for her.
Maggie's story line in this wasn't as interesting to me, I didn't dislike her as much as I did Cait and she wasn't as compelling as Alice. So I'm very middle of the road on my feelings for her.
Everyone in this family is a train wreck and couldn't have a conversation with each other if they tried. Not a single conversation felt like it had any sort of satisfying conclusion, they just talked around the issue or they'd constantly get interrupted. Also this book seems like a great ad for birth control, because all of these children were irritating. Every time a notable conversation/argument happened one of these little crotch goblins would interrupt.
This book was a struggle for me to get through, but I clearly seem to be in the minority so if a somewhat sad family drama sounds like something you'd be into I'd definitely recommend giving this a shot. It's written very well, and I would be interested in reading more from the author. But this one was sadly a miss
I received an ARC of this book from the publisher (Henry Holt & Company) via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Major snooze 😴 nothing overtly wrong with this just very anticlimactic. I did like how all the different characters had their own things going on but I was kind of expecting more to come out of the actual Thanksgiving dinner when everyone was together.
I received this book in a Goodreads giveaway. My review is voluntarily given, and my opinions are my own.
I don't usually read family dramas or books that are just marketed as fiction. I prefer books that have more going on, like mysteries or gothic novels. However, this book sounded so interesting that I requested it when I saw it in the giveaway and put it in my libby and Amazon list if I didn't win it. So glad I won it, though. I find so many books that I want to read, that my book lists have hundreds of books written down already. I am so glad to have read this one.
So many times when an author tries to write more than one main character, let alone multiple, they fail to have even one complex character. They all fall flat to the point the reader struggles to keep them straight. That wasn't the case here. All of the characters were amazing. They were all unique and had their own individual backstories.
The Irish Goodbye By Heather Aimee O'Neill Publish Date Sep 30, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for providing me with an advance listening copy. All thoughts and opinions are completely my own.The Irish Goodbye is about three sisters, Cait, Alice, and Maggie, who come back to their family home on Long Island for Thanksgiving after being apart for many years. Long ago, a terrible boating accident with their brother Topher changed everything, leaving the family with money troubles, guilt, and the pain of his death. Each sister now has her own struggles: Cait is hiding a secret about the accident, Alice is facing problems in her job and marriage, and Maggie is nervous about introducing her girlfriend to their strict Catholic mother. When Cait brings an unexpected guest to dinner, old hurts rise to the surface and the sisters must face the truth about their past and each other.
While the novel does a wonderful job developing each of the sisters as complex, believable characters, the story itself moves at a very slow pace. The emotional depth is there, and Heather Aimee O’Neill captures the weight of grief and family secrets with care, but the plot often feels drawn out and uneventful. Tensions build gradually, yet the payoff comes late, making it easy to lose momentum along the way. Readers who enjoy quiet, character-driven dramas may appreciate the richness of the writing, but those looking for more action or faster-moving family drama might find it difficult to stay engaged.
4.5 stars In this adult debut, the three Ryan sisters reunite in Port Haven, the Long Island home where they grew up. It is Thanksgiving, and they haven't all been together for a decade. After a neighbor's son is killed in an accident, their older brother Topher tragically dies, and none of them have been able to come to terms with it or discuss their grief in the years since. Compounding matters is that each of them is keeping a secret that they are dealing with personally. The mother is a devout Catholic who raised them in the faith. Each sister is dealing with something that is questionable to the beliefs they were raised with, leading to feelings of guilt, shame, judgment, and fear of alienation by their mother.
This is a spectacular debut! I love a good family saga, and this one is outstanding. It reminded me of Blue Sisters in the context of sisters dealing with their grief in the aftermath of losing a sibling. These characters are well-developed, and you root for all of them even though they couldn't be more different. The relationship with their parents, partners, and children is also explored, and I loved all of it. Grief, forgiveness, parenthood, and marriage are expertly explored. Highly recommend this book, which will be widely discussed this fall.
Many thanks to NetGalley, Henry Holt, and Heather Aimee O'Neill for an advance reader's copy in exchange for my honest review.