One fateful night changes the course of a child’s life forever…
Rosie’s mother is a cruel woman and has Rosie’s kind and loving father wrapped around her finger. Though John Tanner does his best to protect her, Rosie often bears the brunt of her mother’s rage. And his protection can’t last forever. In one tragic moment Rosie’s fragile world is shattered. Grieving and alone, Rosie is thrust into a harsh reality, and she must face the obstacles that fate has set in her path. But secrets will out, and Rosie must uncover the shocking truth behind her mother’s cruelty before she can hope for the love and happiness she deserves.
Josephine Cox was born in Blackburn, one of ten children. At the age of sixteen, Josephine met and married her husband Ken, and had two sons. When the boys started school, she decided to go to college and eventually gained a place at university but was unable to take this up as it would have meant living away from home. Instead, she went into teaching – and started to write her first full-length novel. She won the ‘Superwoman of Great Britain’ Award, for which her family had secretly entered her, at the same time as her novel was accepted for publication. She is now a No.1 bestselling author with over 40 books to her name.
She wrote dark psychological thrillers under the name Jane Brindle.
This is a story about Rosie who on a daily basis is mistreated by her cruel mother. Rosie’s father does all he can to protect his beloved daughter, but of course he can’t always be there. Most days when her father is out of the house, Rosie feels alone, but when tragedy strikes her world is turned upside down. How will Rosie cope with what’s happened?
The Lonely Girl by Josephine Cox was a quick and enjoyable read.
No doubt this book will delight Josephine Cox fans and much as I hate to give a book a negative review I personally was well disappointed. The cover is amazing and glossy in fact it's the best part of the book! I had to check twice it was actually written by her it was appalling. It started off well but went downhill very quickly to the point it was constant repetition for virtually the whole of the book until close to the end. I wanted to count the Times Rosie asked Where's Daddy gone Barney"!! It was monotonous, boring and badly written. The last few chapters picked up but to have a book with all of it based around this girl wondering about her dad is not a story in my view. That said I have read other books by her and still have some to read but I am well disappointed with this. It was almost as though it was written by a 12 year old and aimed at one. Hate negative reviews but I have to be honest. Do not be out off reading but it just wasn't for me.
i was so looking forward to reading this book as i am or was an avid josephine cox reader. This book was awful, boring and repetitive. I nearly gave up on several occasions but battled through to the end. I am staggered at how bad it was, not Josephine Cox at her best!
I hate to admit this, but for the first time in a very long time, this was one book that I couldn't finish. I have read Josephine Cox before and enjoyed the read but this book was very poorly written and repetitive . I never rate a book below average, but this time I have to. I won't give up on her yet, jyst hope this was a one off.
I was looking forward to giving this author a try but I could not continue reading this book after 1/2 way through. The writing was so bad. It felt like a young child had written it and threw in big words here and there. I'll have to try another book by this author but I'm not impressed so far.
Poor! I have made a mental note never to read a book from this author again. Long tedious and drawn out descriptions and simplistic characters, the book could have been dealt with in 100 pages, not 350. A little hoorah when it was over, lol.
I wish I could give it 0 stars. It would probably be more interesting to stare at your ceiling for 3 hours than to read this book. I may go as far as to say that it's the worst book I've ever read.
Rosie avgudar sin pappa och han henne. Det är det enda som gör att hon står ut att leva med sin mammas fruktansvärda behandling av henne.
Jag hade vissa förväntningar på den här boken när jag började läsa och hade nog missförstått en del av hur handlingen skulle vara. Jag tyckte att detta var en väldigt lång bok för att så lite verkligen hände i den. Det är väldigt utdragna scener och beskrivningar av allting. Och allt ska beskrivas ner i minsta detalj, det lämnas inte mycket utrymme för läsaren att skapa egna bilder eller tolka informationen.
Jag hade väldigt svårt att förstå hur gammal Rosie egentligen skulle vara, hon är skriven väldigt barnslig och emellanåt verkar hon vara runt 6-7 år när hon är minst dubbelt så gammal. Även hennes kusin som är i 18-årsåldern framställs som väldigt ung när han pratar och reagerar på vissa saker.
Även hur pappan är beskriven tycker jag känns ganska osympatiskt trots att han är den som ska skydda Rosie. Han bortförklarar mammans beteende hela tiden, försöker få Rosie att förlåta och förstå varför hon behandlar henne så illa, när han bara borde ta sin dotter och dra därifrån eller åtminstone sparka ut mamman.
Detta har varit en hyllvärmare länge så jag är glad att jag äntligen tog mig igenom den, men hade nog egentligen klarat mig utan historien.
Never ever do I want to read such drivel again, the 376 pages could easily have been reduced to 15 if all the repetition had been left out and phrases like 'unable to come to terms with her grief' after Rosie has just found out that her father had died in an accident ( i.e. mudered by Molly, whom she thought was her mother), and more show-than-tell had been used
My killer combination to reduce stress is a good book, a cosy blanket and plenty of heart-filling chocolates!😋❤️📖
This book is a reflection on both genders to assure us that humanity still exists and about the loving people that help maintain it a reality in this world. I rate this book a 3.8 out of 5. I finished this book within a day as its a short one, taking us through the terrible life of a small girl who grew to be loving and passionate even after being tortured by her mother. Her father, aunty, uncle, a cousin and Barney(the dog) make her world, enabling her to survive this harsh reality she has to live through. But her heart is smashed to pieces due to her mother's greediness. Yet she strives to rise to happiness with the help of those around her. I would recommend this book to teenagers.
Rather poor. There were many parts which were incredibly repetitive, and I had to reread to ensure I wasn't going mad! The characters were mostly very one dimensional, the entire storyline was rather predictable, and the entire storyline was dragged out far too much. Some parts of the book went on for far too long, whereas other parts, the parts one wanted to read about, were rushed over and not really covered. The main character is supposed to be 15 years old but the whole way through it seems like she's about 8 years old. She has a very childlike mind, and way of talking. If there was a reason for this, or it was meant to be a tool to tell the story, this was never explained, so as a result it read very oddly.
Oh. My. God. This was horrible. A dis functional family, a very uneven plot (the author couldn't decide what time period she wanted. The daughter goes to school in a pony trap but then later her father sets off the automatic security lights. Hell if I knew.) and a slow-moving situation.
The characters were oddly drawn and EVERYONE talked way above their age groups and station. I think the authors' thesaurus was dog-eared by the time she finished.
Worst book ever! Poorly written, repetitive, obvious contractual cash fodder. Unbelievable storyline with awful one dimensional characters & a cliché ending. I urge anyone; don't waste time reading this rubbish.
First Josephine Cox book and based on this my last. Agree with several reviews about it being repetitive. Found it lacked a real story and just seemed to race through as if reading the author's notes. It was difficult to warm to the characters.
The book was very repetitive and quite predictable. The conversations in the book seem very unnatural as if they are always trying to convince the reader of something. Trying so hard to convey a message instead of allowing the reader to find the mystery on their own. It's like bad acting.
Terrible terrible writing style. Just skim read tho wanting to not bother with it at all. Can’t understand how it ever got published! NO STARS if I could!! First time I’ve read this author and it will be the last!
I was lucky to win this book from book reads, however.. oh dear...repetitive and boring, I skim- read it after the first few chapters to get it over and done with.
This is a terrible book. DNF. The writing is amateurish, trite and awful. The characters are unbelievable and almost clownish in their roles as the author has written. And the storyline? Arrggg. Why is John Tanner suddenly so desperate to find his wife late one night after 15 years of her staying out late and (supposedly) tramping around? To bring her home so she can abuse their daughter again? Regarding Molly's whereabouts: Page 64 the landlady says "No, I have no idea whatsoever". Page 65 John thinks "Maybe she's (the landlady) right and Molly will be home by now". The landlady DIDN'T say that! I could go on and on, but I would be quoting from each and every page of this 324 page tragic waste of paper. Truthfully, I will skim through until the end (ala watching a car accident mentality...). I will wager that Rosie finds a fine man to marry and has a child that she promises will never experience the horrors of abuse as she did. gak I feel a big BOOHISS is deserved by the editors of this book. Aren't editors supposed to, at the very least, check for continuity? In speech, events, timelines?