For Niamh Ryan, the Foleys are family. Her childhood flew by on their farm, playing with her best friend Peter and his sister Kate - all the while being doted on by their mother Helen and coached by their father Liam, a legendary former hurling player.
Now, following a distressing series of events, the family ties are strained. Niamh receives drunken phone calls and messages from Peter who can't understand what derailed their burgeoning relationship three years ago. Meanwhile, Helen Foley is trying her best to escape her life by checking into guesthouses under the names of women she went to school with. In her life in Belfast, Kate is attempting to hold down a job and a relationship while carrying the weight of the family's secrets, and feeling like she is the one to blame.
As a family wedding looms, and the women find themselves face to face, the knotty love that still binds Niamh, Helen and Kate might just bring them back together again.
Told through the perspectives of three very different women, Everything That Is Beautiful unfolds the story of one complicated family in startlingly honest prose. By turns funny and deeply moving, and with unmatched emotional intelligence, this is an unforgettable story of love and family, heartbreak and hope - and who we might become after we pick up the pieces.
Family relationships are complicated. Relationships with friends and with neighbors can be messy as well . There are five children in the family of a famous hurler and the girl next door, an only child who spends so much time with them, she’s become part of the family. I had no idea what hurling was , but I got an education on its importance and the impact on people’s lives in Ireland, this community and this family in particular.
When they are adults, something happens that severs bonds that seemed too strong to break. In three alternating narratives, Niamh, the girl next door, Helen, the mom of the five kids and wife of the famous hurler and coach and Kate, one of their children, we get a feel for all of the personalities. The something that happens is known only to the three narrators as they reflect on the past and present.
There’s quite a few characters. In addition to those mentioned , there are spouses and partners and Niamh’s parents as well. A lot of ground is covered - the imperfect relationships, alcoholism, sexual identity and the thing that happened that I won’t spoil, although it’s revealed fairly early in the novel. I can’t say that I always understand everyone and at times their actions felt over the top. However, I was sympathetic towards most of them and hopeful for healing and forgiveness given the abundance of love they feel for each other. I read the author’s debut novel Snowflake which I enjoyed overall and was glad to have the opportunity to read her new novel as it is also well written.
I received a copy of this from HarperCollins through Edelweiss.
«Embora tenha acreditado que estas pessoas poderiam existir, em momento algum deixei de me sentir como uma observadora relativamente afastada. Nunca fui capaz de ultrapassar um certo distanciamento emocional das personagens, e nunca fui capaz de compreender a 100% a maneira como algumas reagiram ao que lhes aconteceu.»
I was so engrossed by this book. It’s one of those reads that completely immerses you in the story, and you're there - in these lives and this place.
It follows Niamh, Helen, and Kate: three women whose lives have been intertwined for years through family, friendship, and a shared history rooted in a tight-knit GAA community. Growing up around the Foley family farm, Niamh was as much a part of their world as anyone. But something happened years earlier that fractured everything, and as a family wedding approaches, old tensions and long-buried secrets begin to surface.
What I loved most is how vividly this small-town community is realised. The GAA isn’t just background - it shapes everything: identity, reputation, and belonging. It all feels so familiar and true to life.
The characters are exceptionally well drawn. They're complicated, flawed, and completely believable. You understand their choices, even when they hurt each other. And that’s really the heart of it: this is a story about how people love one another, and how they hurt one another too. The closeness, the loyalty, the damage that can sit quietly for years. It’s moving and emotional without ever feeling overdone. There’s a real honesty to it that makes it linger.
I absolutely adored this book and can't recommend it enough. Straight on my 2026 Favourites list.
„Isn’t that all art is? People having breakdowns. How else are we supposed to get through each other?“ (p. 188)
To Niamh, the Foleys are family. She spent her childhood on their farm, playing with her best friend Peter and his sister, Kate. Their mother, Helen, looked after Niamh with even more love and care than her own mother did. Liam—the Foley's dad —was a legendary hurler (a Celtic team sport played with sticks and a ball) and was particularly keen on encouraging the girls to play. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ By now, however, the relationship between Niamh and the Foleys is fractured—the result of a chain of terrible events. A wedding brings Niamh, Helen, and Kate together again for the first time in ages. Each of the women is grappling with her own fate and with the specific incident that drove them apart all those years ago. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ The blurb sounded a little "messy" to me (a premonition, perhaps?), but I absolutely fell in love with the cover and always have a deep appreciation for Irish literature. On the whole, I enjoyed the three distinct points of view offered by Niamh, Helen, and Kate. There is a flurry of names introduced right at the start, so it took me a little while to get everything sorted out. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ The story unfolds at a leisurely pace, interspersed with numerous flashbacks. I felt, however, that it lost its way in certain aspects. There are queer characters (yay!), though I wasn't entirely pleased with how they were portrayed. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ The narrative’s climax ultimately falls flat—something that left me feeling quite frustrated, given that the potential for something great was certainly there. In my opinion, the gravity of that initial event—the catalyst for all the subsequent turmoil—is not handled with the appropriate weight. I felt it lacked depth—specifically regarding the confrontation itself and the actual resolution of the underlying conflict. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ A shame! In the end, it only earned a 3/5 star rating from me.
A friend asked me last night how I read as much as I do. She's not a reader, so I joked and said, "It's Saturday night, what else would I be doing?"
In reality, its authors like Louise Nealon who make it easy. I've raved about Snowflake since it was released and was really hoping 'Everything That is Beautiful' would live up to my own expectations. It certainly did that and more. I started reading it yesterday and I'm done. That doesn't happen often!
It's funny, full of compassion, so beautifully written and shows the complexities of loving people who will shatter our hearts.
It's about community, in more ways than one, and leads us through how beauty and pain can live side by side.
Thank you Glimmer Book Club for gifting me a copy (which was very kindly gifted by Manilla Press).
I absolutely adored this. It is about the Foleys, a big messy family that has extended to include the next door neighbour Niamh. We see their lives through Niamh's eyes, but also Helen Foley, the mum, and Kate her daughter. There is tragedy and tension and their tight little community is rocked by it.
I think my only complaints are the name and cover do the book a complete disservice. I probably wouldn't want to pick it up if I wasn't already familiar with the author's brilliant debut! This is heartbreaking and heartfelt and funny and annoying in the way siblings are annoying. It hit every beat for me.
I was so engrossed by this book. It’s one of those reads that completely immerses you in the story, and you're there - in these lives and this place.
It follows Niamh, Helen, and Kate: three women whose lives have been intertwined for years through family, friendship, and a shared history rooted in a tight-knit GAA community. Growing up around the Foley family farm, Niamh was as much a part of their world as anyone. But something happened years earlier that fractured everything, and as a family wedding approaches, old tensions and long-buried secrets begin to surface.
What I loved most is how vividly this small-town community is realised. The GAA isn’t just background - it shapes everything: identity, reputation, and belonging. It all feels so familiar and true to life.
The characters are exceptionally well drawn. They're complicated, flawed, and completely believable. You understand their choices, even when they hurt each other. And that’s really the heart of it: this is a story about how people love one another, and how they hurt one another too. The closeness, the loyalty, the damage that can sit quietly for years. It’s moving and emotional without ever feeling overdone. There’s a real honesty to it that makes it linger.
I absolutely adored this book and can't recommend it enough. Straight on my 2026 Favourites list.
Beautifully written and executed; a tale and a trail of devastation. There is so much to love about this book and its multitude of realistic, believable and compelling characters. This read is definitely a crash course on all things Irish! A bit of concentration required for the first third to get my head around the full cast and a fairly abrupt ending - both aspects had me checking myself.
Overall, a brilliant audiobook by my favourite Irish narrator!
Everything That is Beautiful is the second novel from Irish author Louise Nealon, following the huge success of Snowflake in 2021. I liked that book; mostly I really appreciated how well it was written but I struggled to relate to the main character. I got along much better this time.
The Foley family seem idyllic to Niamh Ryan, an only child growing up next door to this sprawling clan captained by Liam, a former hurling legend and now a farmer. Helen Foley dotes on Niamh as if she was one of her own, and Niamh grows up close to Kate and Peter, two of the Foley kids. Fast forward to the present day and these close bonds are now broken. Niamh and Peter seemed like they might become more than friends but something abruptly put a stop to that and he’s still none the wiser as to what happened. Helen Foley tries to escape her life by checking into guesthouses under the names of women she went to school with, and Kate has jumped ship entirely, moving to Belfast to continue to hold all the family secrets, but at a welcome remove. With a family wedding coming up, can Niamh, Helen, and Kate hold it all together, or will those secrets finally spill out?
This is a character study of three very different and interesting women. Hurling and rural life feature strongly here and I appreciated that; it felt believable and made for a nice change. The author examines ordinary lives that are also complicated and messy, as they often are in real life!
This book deals with some complex and upsetting issues that are expertly handled by Nealon. It’s a family drama but it’s more nuanced than that; there’s a lot going on here but it’s an engaging read and I flew through it.
Looking forward to reading whatever she writes next!
With many thanks @gillhessltd for my early copy. Everything That is Beautiful is available to buy now. All opinions are my own, as always.
* I went between print and audio on this one and didn’t love the audio narration. There’s a lot of characters in this book and I feel the narrator left me confused about them at times!
Why, oh why, did I leave this sitting on my shelf for so long?
This is such a tender, compassionate novel. It doesn’t shy away from some incredibly difficult subject matter, but Nealon handles every page with such care that nothing ever feels gratuitous or there for shock value. There’s a quiet confidence in her writing that allows the story to unfold naturally, trusting the reader to sit with its complexities.
Set in a rural Irish community where hurling, family and reputation are woven tightly together, the story follows Helen, her daughter Kate, and their neighbour Niamh as they each carry the weight of old wounds towards an upcoming family wedding. It’s a story about friendship, betrayal, misogyny, grief, mental health, forgiveness and the long shadows cast by secrets, but above all it’s about people. Flawed, complicated, recognisable people.
One of the things I loved most was how utterly ordinary everyone felt. We’ve all known a Mary Ryan holding court across a wedding table. We’ve all seen the quiet expectations, the silences, the things that go unsaid. Nealon captures that deeply ingrained Irish instinct to protect reputations, to look the other way and to sweep difficult truths beneath the rug with remarkable honesty. It feels both specific to place and universally relatable.
She also explores something I’ve often thought about: the way we remember the dead. How people can be elevated almost to sainthood while the harm they caused quietly disappears from the conversation. It’s handled with such emotional intelligence that even the most deeply flawed characters are afforded a surprising amount of empathy.
For all its darkness, though, this isn’t a bleak book. There’s warmth, wit and genuine humour threaded throughout, particularly in the wonderfully familiar chaos surrounding an Irish wedding. Those lighter moments make the harder ones land all the more powerfully.
Nealon has a remarkable gift for writing characters that stay with you. Highly recommend!
Thank you to the publisher for kindly sending me a review copy. All opinions my own.
Everything that is Beautiful by Louise Nealon (April 2026, Manilla Press/Bonnier) is described by author Roisin O’Donnell as ‘vivid and compelling. A big-hearted, immersive novel about the complex bonds of family and friendships’. With a family wedding on the horizon, three women are forced to think back on their past history and the reasons why their once close relationship is fractured.
When researching her second novel Louise Nealon was inspired by the MeToo movement and the experiences of women living in a rural environment. She sets her characters in a GAA town where hurling is central to the community. Helen loved being the wife of Liam Foley, a celebrated ex-county hurler who, in later years, became a hurley maker. With Mary Ryan, Helen’s best friend, as her neighbour, they had enjoyed years of harmony. Liam was looked up to by the entire county and beyond for his skill on the pitch as a younger man. His reputation was solid making him a legend among fans and also a respected club coach on retirement.
Niamh Ryan, Mary’s daughter, loved calling to the Foleys. She had a great touch with the sliotar (hurling ball) and was in awe of Liam Foley. With Peter Foley by her side, they would puck back and forth in the hope of catching Liam’s eye. Local players would drop by to get their hurleys from Liam leaving Peter and Niamh dazzled by stardom. These were their idols. These were the lads they wanted to emulate. As the years passed, the children grew up. Niamh became a popular camogie player (female hurling), with her leadership and expertise on the field recognised by many. But, as the years past, circumstances changed and the dynamic between the two families became fragmented
Niamh and Peter were always considered a likely match, a couple who would surely walk up the aisle together. Peter wanted their relationship to develop but Niamh, after a brief time together, kept him at a distance for reasons he could never fathom. Peter left for Australia but Niamh was always on his horizon.
With Maria Foley on the cusp of her wedding day tensions rise and secrets begin to unravel. Helen has taken to heading off on solo trips and ordering new clothes online. Kate Foley, now in Belfast, has had her own personal issues but she also carries a secret that weighs heavily on her heart. Niamh has faced her own demons, attempting over the years to move forward but the upcoming wedding is now bringing everything to the forefront and the house of cards is slowly starting to topple.
Everything that is Beautiful is an intimate and sensitive tale, one that vividly captures a rural community and it’s passion for the game. There are villages, towns and crossroads throughout the country where the GAA (football, hurling and camogie) is the life and breath of the local environs. There is a pitch in every parish and for many it is a religion, with the players venerated for their prowess and touch. Community is everything. The parish is everything. Reputation is everything. It is into this environment that Louise Nealon has set her novel. The dynamic between genders is well drawn, with fascinating insights into the different perspectives across various themes. This is an emotive read with a specific, yet quite subtle, thread that both angers and saddens in equal measure. There is a lot to be unpicked within these pages which makes it an excellent book club choice. A lingering novel with a very authentic feel Everything that is Beautiful is a pensive and stirring read.
~ The way you're carrying on you'd swear you killed someone. Niamh, we don't care if you don't pick up a hurley again in your life - I mean, that's a lie, we do care, but we just want you to be happy?.. ~
What a little gem of a book. Louise Nealon is back with her folllow up to the excellent “Snowflake”.
This was such a good read. Dealing with loss, identity, grief, and long kept secrets, this book deals with it so well without ever rushing to scandal. It is also very Irish in the sense of community and GAA. And really, with the FMCs Helen, Niamh, and Kate that shine, we ALL know a Maria 😂
We even all know a Mary Ryan. Her at the wedding was peak!!!!
A story on healing, of using our knowledge of the past to grow in the future. As hard as it may seem. For Niamh, the Foleys were everything. Until they weren’t.
I suppose what I enjoyed in this was the ordinariness of it all. It was believable on all points. As ordinary as it can be with such intense and complex issues.
All have their motives, their demons, their stories, and as it ended I wished it could go on just a little longer. Is it as good as Snowflake? In my opinion, no. Does it matter? Not in the slightest. It’s its own story that more than stands on its own two pages.
TBR Pile: Graig Bought: Hubb16, New Ross - 10/04/26
I couldn’t quite get into this and ended up not finishing. The tone and setting didn’t fully connect for me. While it includes recognisable elements of rural Irish life with hurling, farming, religion. The portrayal felt over simplified at times, with familiar character types like the strong family matriarch, a priest, a farmer. It came across more as a stylised version of Irish life from long ago. I can see how it might appeal to other readers, particularly those less familiar with rural Ireland.
Everything That Is Beautiful* by Louise Nealon is the much-anticipated sophomore novel from the Snowflake author. It is very different but there is a distinct cadence to her prose that feels familiar, as does her ability to cut right to the core of her characters.
All Niamh Ryan has wanted since she was a small child is to be part of the Foley family. She grew up pucking around with Peter and Kate, was doted on by mammy Helen and had the privilege of being coached by daddy Liam, the legendary hurler. Niamh easily exists within the dream until her teenage years when a catastrophic incident shatters her world, driving a wedge between her and the people who knew her best.
Three years on, Niamh is isolated from Peter, Kate still isn't speaking to her and Helen appears to be having some form of mid life crisis, struggling with secrets of many sorts. Now, against the backdrop of a family wedding, the three women will soon come face-to-face and what happens next is anyone's guess.
The Foleys and Niamh are so incredibly complex, each laden down with unspoken baggage that makes the dynamics between them, particularly the women, so blisteringly real and incredibly compelling. There's moments of genuine humour and warmth, but there is also a lot of melancholy, soul searching and sacrifice. Out 2/4.
Families can go on for years with things no one ever puts into words. The simplest path is often not the best one.
Memories inside a family is not shared in the same way. The same moment sits differently in each person, turning into slightly different stories, and still everyone carries on as if they’re talking about the same thing. That gap doesn’t get closed.
👉🏼 It just becomes the structure of the relationship itself. People adjust to it, build around it, and keep things going. It ends up shaping how everyone relates to each other.
I think it will depend a lot on your own experience with family. If you’ve ever been in that kind of tension, there’s a lot here that will feel recognisable. If you haven’t, it might just feel like a slow story about people orbiting each other.
🧠 This story made me more aware of how much of family life is built on what never gets spoken, and how easily that becomes permanent.
Unfortunately it turned out to be one of those books I should have read instead of listened to. Too many characters to keep track of and too many jumps in time made following the narration hard. I sadly, didn't enjoy the choice of making the narrator go onto fake deep voice mode to portray the male characters. I appreciate the effort but for me, the result was mostly cringey.
Now on to the book itself. I adored the small town feel of it and the very layered map of complex relationships portrayed. The author did a wonderful job as well at managing the tension of the story.
Fantastic book, set in unspecified part of rural Ireland, Nealon tells the story of a GAA family from the perspective of three different women. I absolutely loved this novel because it showed the both the dynamics of Irish families and gossiping small towns in an understated and genuine way. Without spoiling, I felt that she showed so many experiences that women deal with so organically that woman reading could easily imagine someone they know living out the plot. I imagine a man reading it would be surprised at the layers of issues the characters face and how commonly they occur. One thing that some people might dislike is that not only is the story told from three different perspectives but each chapter jumps from the current time that the narrative takes place, to memories of previous events and then back again. I actually really enjoyed it but some people who don’t like that style might find it hard to immerse themselves in the story. Overall I looooooooved how local community is portrayed and the extremely Irish way each character deals with their problems.
A beautiful and messy Irish fiction! There’s so many characters introduced in this book but mainly focuses on Niamh, Helen & Kate. Wouldn’t have minded a chapter or two on Peter and I also would’ve love a family tree in the beginning lol
eu só não to dando 5 estrelas porque achei a cronologia da história um pouco confusa, mas eu amei o enredo e os personagens desse livro, prendeu toda a minha atenção nos últimos dias