‘A Christmas Wish For The Shipyard Girls’ is the 9th book in the bestselling series featuring ‘The Shipyard Girls’. I have been a fan of this series right from the very beginning. I have read, reviewed, loved and raved about every book in the series to date. As soon as I finish reading the latest book in the series, I immediately look forward to the next book in the series and (im)patiently wait until I can get my hands on a copy. ‘A Christmas Wish For The Shipyard Girls’ is the latest in the series and it was released on 1st October 2020. I was fortunate enough to have a sneaky peek at an early review copy and boy oh boy, it is another amazing addition to an amazing series written by an amazing author. I absolutely ADORED reading ‘A Christmas Wish For The Shipyard Girls’ but more about that in a bit.
It would seem kind of wrong to single out certain characters as I loved them all, apart from a couple of exceptions. For a change I am going to focus on characters that I cannot stand and one that I have grown to love. I absolutely loathe Miriam Crawford, who is the mother of Helen and wife of Jack. I honestly do not think that there is any way Miriam can redeem herself. She has lied, cheated and manipulated every one of her loved ones. She is a downright despicable woman. She’s a control freak and she isn’t happy if people disobey her orders. She is treating her daughter like dirt, keeping her husband away from his one true love, Gloria, and their daughter, she has dug the dirt on all of the Shipyard Girls and is keeping the information to herself until she can use it to inflict maximum hurt. Honestly if I could have jumped inside the pages of the book to give her a darn good slap with a wet fish then I would have done. Another character that irritates the life out of me, is that of Charles Havelock, who just so happens to be the father of Miriam. He is also a manipulative, devious, lying, cheating scumbag who has an overinflated sense of his own importance and a sense of entitlement that by rights should see him serve a long prison sentence. I won’t go too far into what he has done but needless to say I was wanting to jump inside the pages of the book to give him a good slap with a wet flip flop. I am still keeping my fingers crossed that sometime in the future, Miriam and Charles will take a very long walk off Roker Pier (Sunderland) and preferably not re-emerge from the sea. Miriam is the mother of Helen. Had you told me at the beginning of the series that I would end up liking Helen, then I would have thought that you had lost your marbles and needed a stay in a local psychiatric hospital. Helen is the only member of the Havelock/ Crawford family to have redeemed herself over the course of a series. She was downright evil to start with but over time she has mellowed, seen her mother and grandfather for what they are, she has even befriended the Shipyard Girls and she shares more of a mother/ daughter bond with Gloria, who is her father’s true love, than she does with her own birth mother. Helen hasn’t always had the best of luck with men, but she has formed a very close friendship with Dr. John Parker, who has been a rock to Helen. There’s a mutual attraction going on there but neither have actually told the other just how they feel about them. There’s a spanner thrown into the works in the form of Dr. Eris, who might as well have a ‘desperate’ sticker tattooed across her forehead. Dr. Eris knows how Dr. Parker feels about Helen, although he hasn’t told her, and Dr. Eris will do anything that she can do to ‘make’ Dr. Parker hers. I am keeping everything crossed that Helen and Dr. Parker get together in the end and that Dr. Eris joins Miriam and Charles in taking a very long walk off Roker Pier. Now that would make me happy!
As you can probably tell, this is one series that I adore. The release date of each new book in the series is enough to grab my attention and I very impatiently wait until it is released. Every time a new book in the series is released, I grab a copy, well after my OAP Mam has finished reading it, and then squirrel myself away until such time as I have finished reading the book. I cannot turn the pages quickly enough with this series. I sit down only intending to read for a couple of chapters to fill in the odd half hour or so but I would become so wrapped up in the story, believe so much in the characters that I would still be reading over an hour and several chapters later. To say that reading ‘A Christmas Wish For The Shipyard Girls’ or indeed any book in the series is addictive has to be the understatement of the decade! I soon got to the end of ‘A Christmas Wish For The Shipyard Girls’ and I immediately started to look forward to the next book in the series which is due for release in March 2021.
‘A Christmas Wish For The Shipyard Girls’ is superbly written but then I think that to be true of the every single book in the series to date. Nancy Revell certainly knows how to grab your attention from the start and draw you into the story. Once she has your attention then she doesn’t let you have it back until the moment you read the last word on the last page. I found that I became very emotionally involved in the story to the extent that I was ‘interacting’ with the book and talking to the characters as if they could hear me. When certain characters misbehaved, then I would throw out the odd comment like ‘you swine’ (that’s the polite version) or ‘wait until I get hold of you’. I also found that I wanted to jump inside the pages of the book to slap certain characters, to give certain characters a hug and I even cheered when certain characters made a stand and got one over any of the characters that I especially dislike. Before anybody says anything, yes I know that this is a fictional story and therefore not real but I find that if I enjoy a story to the extent that I enjoyed this one then I tend to ‘live’ the story as if it were real.
‘The Shipyard Girls’ series goes from strength to strength and each new book in the series surpasses the previous book. I loved the fact that the series is set in Sunderland, Co. Durham. At the time that the book is set, Sunderland was in County Durham and it will forever be in County Durham to me. Although I don’t have any Shipyard Girls in my family, I do have several relatives who came from Sunderland and lived there during the time that the story is set. In a sense, reading books such as this one, gives me a greater sense of the conditions in which my relatives had to live under. I have to say that ‘The Shipyard Girls’ would be perfect for television adaptation. Nancy Revell is classed as being the new Catherine Cookson, but I have to say that I enjoy Nancy’s books far more than I enjoyed Catherine Cookson’s books. To me, Nancy Revell is the better author.
‘A Christmas Wish For The Shipyard Girls’ is an amazing addition to an amazing series written by an amazing author. When you pick up one of Nancy’s books, you are guaranteed an unputdownable page turner of a read, that has a bit of everything within its covers. There’s drama, love, loss, laughter and well you get the picture. I would definitely recommend this author and her books to other readers. I will definitely be reading more of Nancy’s work in the future. I will be the second person in the queue (after my lovely Mam) to grab a copy of Nancy’s next book which is due for release in March 2021. The score on the Ginger Book Geek board is a very well deserved 5* out of 5*.