The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Lost in France, in a haze of happy memories

-

Gillian McAllister’s debut novel, Everything But The Truth, was an immediate smash, shooting straight into the top 10 bestseller­s list.

Now her second book, Anything You Do Say, is being published in paperback (Michael Joseph £7.99) on January 25.

Gillian, who combines writing with being a lawyer, lives in Birmingham.

The sights, sounds – and smells – of Normandy took me back to my childhood. we decided to go for a few days.

It was almost exactly as I remembered. We took the Eurotunnel, rattling away underneath the sea for only 20 minutes and emerging into sunny France.

When we arrived in the Berny Riviere region, just two hours later, I was immediatel­y transporte­d back to my childhood.

The unzipping sound of the tents as we walked along the grass paths, taking a few Euros to the campsite shop for milk and croissants.

The smells of people’s dinners drifting across at twilight as we opened a bottle of wine. Playing Scrabble on the decking as the rain drip, dripped around us.

It wasn’t quiet, or especially restful, but it was, somehow, just what a holiday ought to be – listening to children playing in the nearby lake, visiting the bakery every morning, walking back in the dark by torchlight, listening to the crickets and the murmurs of parents catching up quietly once their children were in bed.

We were relaxed for the first time in months. I wasn’t half-writing a novel in my mind as I often am. My laptop remained in my suitcase.

I read two books in three days instead, paddled in the swimming pools, gossiped over cheese and wine.

I wouldn’t hesitate to go back.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom