Author's Note: This Edition has been superseded and is no longer available to purchase new. Unless specifically referring to this edition, please log any comments or reviews against the current edition of Sunrises. Thanks.
When Anthony and Christine’s daughter dies the void is unimaginable and unbearable. Grief is driving them apart and they struggle to find peace; big questions have no answers and important truths hide hard lessons.
Only by learning to share can they find a way to re-build hope for a future.
Sunrises is the central story from the book Sunrises And Other Stories - a collection of stories linked by characters and events. At their core is ‘Sunrises’, which is re-told here in its entirety.
Paul grew up in a west London suburb and now lives in Berkshire. Married with two children, he is passionate about music, sport and, most of all, writing, on which he now concentrates full-time. Paul has written six novels and a collection of short stories and his primary literary ambition is that you enjoy reading them while he is hard at work on the next one (but still finding time to play drums).
Sunrises is a work of literature. The author tells us that the work began as a collection of short stories that he assembled into a novel. There is a residual lack of cohesion between a number of the stories in that they do not follow a lateral sequence in the flow of the storyline and appears to leave plot-holes. But not so, the arrangement is masterful. An underlying theme in the apparent incohesion between the stories is the natural consequence of the deep disruption to a family and its members caused by the tragic loss of a loved family member. The characters live their lives under the effects of this loss – as in real life. The result of this never-ending loss on the characters results often in their illogical acts and decisions. The author takes the reader through various levels of a full range of human emotions, cleverly penned with a precision in language that introduces the correct word as one the reader might meet for the first time. Paul Marriner possesses a considerable writing talent. This might not be the book for everybody, but is certainly the read for those who enjoy being taken through the range of human emotions from ecstatic joys to deeper despairs. Highly recommended.