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Seeking Clemency

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An empty house. A secret room. The key to a tragic Irish past.

Married and living comfortably in Berkshire, Caroline Tremain has succeeded in turning her strange Irish childhood into a series of dinner anecdotes with which to amuse her friends.

But when she receives a phone call from Marie-Rose Keane, her grandmother’s former maid, to say that her aunt Constance Conroy has died, painful memories of her childhood come hurtling back…

With her trademark wit and poignancy, Joy Martin’s Seeking Clemency will leave you moved, and filled with the lingering vibrant images of a bygone Ireland.

Praise for Joy Martin

“Most impressive. A fine novel. Joy Martin carries her story with great skill.” – Benedict Kiely

"They are highly professional and tell a gripping, page-turning story...We need an Irish Downton Abbey!" - Christopher Sinclair-Stevenson

“Readable and entertaining” – Dublin Evening Press

Joy Martin was born in Limerick. She trained as a journalist and worked on Dublin’s Evening Press, then moved to writing news for the Zambia Broadcasting Corporation and the BBC Home and External Services. She has broadcast in Ireland, Zambia, South Africa and Britain. She is the acclaimed author of A Wrong to Sweeten and The Moon is Red in April.

272 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 2, 2014

28 people are currently reading
44 people want to read

About the author

Joy Martin

17 books8 followers
Joy Martin is an Irish journalist and author. Born in Limerick, where she was educated at Laurel Hill Convent, her father was an English Protestant and her mother an Irish Catholic. As Ireland’s Assistant Land Commissioner, her great grandfather, John George O’Brien Kelly, a lawyer and agriculturalist, brokered the deal which gave tenants the right to purchase land over a 30-year period, turning him into a national hero. The O’Brien Kellys owned most of the land on the boundaries of Limerick and Clare and three Georgian manors, Moylish House, Clonmacken House and Fedamore House.
Joy writes:
‘Living in a cottage on my grandfather’s land, I played in these houses as a child so, inevitably, tales of secret passages leading down to the river, illicit love affairs, murder, conspiracy and ghosts on the stairs found their way into my novels.’
Her first short story was published when she was still at school. She trained as a journalist on a local paper, The Limerick Weekly Echo, and subsequently worked as a reporter on The Evening Press, in Dublin, the Rand Daily Mail, in Johannesburg and for BBC Home News and World Service

You can hear about how Joy Martin's writing process in the link below:

https://open.spotify.com/episode/3Sl4...

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Joy Martin.
Author 17 books8 followers
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June 16, 2018
After a long absence Caroline Tremain returns to Ireland to attend her aunt’s funeral and to visit the house she loves. Carrigrua, set on the shores of Lough Derg in County, is now standing empty. Seeing it again, Caroline is haunted by painful memories. Of how, as a motherless child, she failed to prove herself as a true Conroy to her omnipotent grandmother. Of her inexplicable banishment to England, and of the mysterious Clemency Conroy who holds the key to her own existence. Who was Clemency ? What happened to her in Carrigrua 30 years ago ? And what really went on in Caroline’s childhood ?
Profile Image for Sharon Tonkin.
4 reviews
July 18, 2021
Really enjoyed the read.
However proofreading let the book down. Many errors.
8 reviews
February 5, 2022
Fantastic read, well written and lovely plot. Great virtual tour around Ireland.
Profile Image for Tricia Copeland.
Author 35 books1,846 followers
August 3, 2019
I loved this book. The main character Caroline has a spunkiness that was hard not to like and root for. I would call this a chick lit book as it has some romance, some mystery, but ultimately is about a woman in transition and how she handles her transition and becomes the person she wants to be. I applaud Joy for a great book! I can't wait to read others in the series.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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