Pheasants Nest by Louise Milligan was one of my top reads of 2024. The extraordinary novel introduced journalist Kate Delaney and her terrifying ordeal after spurning the advances of a man in a bar. Shellybanks picks up several months after Kate’s miraculous survival.
Kate, struggling with PTSD, and her boyfriend Liam are on an extended holiday of sorts in Greece when Kate receives news that tragedy has befallen her Aunt Dolores in Ireland. Kate and Liam immediately fly to Dublin to offer comfort and support, but what Dolores really wants—now that she realises time is running out—is Kate’s help to finally tell the story she has kept hidden for decades: the abuse and trauma she endured as a vulnerable teenager, and the search for the infant stolen from her.
Written in three parts, the first reacquaints the reader with Kate, while the second focuses on Dolores’s heartbreaking story. One of eleven children, Dolores’s overwhelmed parents enrolled her in a residential “Cookery School for Young Ladies” when she was fourteen. It appeared to be a promising opportunity, offering a nationally recognised qualification under the supervision of trained instructors. Instead, the students were subjected to indoctrination, assault, and exploitation by women who professed righteousness and piety.
The school delivered none of what it promised. Instead, it groomed the girls to become “Help”—effectively indentured servants for a cult calling themselves the Group, hiding under the banner of the Catholic faith.
Shellybanks does not make for comfortable reading. At various times I felt desperately sad and deeply angry about the trauma Dolores suffered, and about the misogyny and corruption that allowed the Group to thrive. Ireland in the 1970s was a period when women and girls had almost no agency over their own lives, and the dictates of the Church—particularly the Catholic Church—were largely unquestioned.
In a magazine interview, Milligan explains that she drew not only from her own investigative work but also from the experiences of real women, including her own beloved aunts, to bring authenticity to her characters and their circumstances.
As Kate and Dolores grapple with their respective trauma, they find strength in each other’s resilience. And as the darkness of the past is finally exposed, the future becomes just a little brighter.
Haunting and powerful, Shellybanks is compelling fiction.