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TOMES TOO GOOD TO FORGET

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We Are Not in the World by Conor O’Callaghan (Doubleday, approx €15.99, out April 30) Heartbroke­n after a long, painful love affair, a man takes a job driving a haulage lorry through France. Travelling with him is a secret passenger – his twentysome­thing daughter. There’s a fractured relationsh­ip; the past brings its own trauma. Both won’t be the same by the journey’s end.

The Cutting Place by Jane Casey (HarperColl­ins, approx €16.99, out April 16) DS Maeve Kerrigan finds herself in an unfamiliar world of wealth and ruthless behaviour when she investigat­es the murder of young journalist Paige Hargreaves, who was working on a story of a private society for the most privileged men in London. They all had secrets. Then she disappeare­d. But Paige had secrets too.

The Silent Treatment by Abbie Greaves (Cornerston­e, approx €13.99, out April 2) Maggie and Frank, married 40 years, have by choice not spoken to each other in six months. They care for each other, sleep in the same bed, but no longer talk. Frank just couldn’t and Maggie didn’t know why. But with Maggie now in hospital, Frank tries to find the words he couldn’t bring himself to say.

A Thousand Moons by Sebastian Barry (Faber & Faber, approx €16.99, out March 19) The sequel to Barry’s Days Without End follows Winona, a young Lakota orphan adopted by former soldiers Thomas McNulty and John Cole. Onafarm in 1870s Tennessee, Winona’s far from her past; but after the American Civil War, she struggles as her already fragile new family life begins to unravel.

The Switch by Beth O’Leary (Quercus, approx €13.99, out April 30) Leena Cotton is ordered to take a two-month sabbatical after blowing a big presentati­on at work. Her grandmothe­r Eileen lives in rural Yorkshire and at nearly 80 and single, she wants a chance at love. They propose a swap for two months, but stepping into each other’s shoes isn’t going to be easy.

The Liberation of Brigid Dunne by Patricia Scanlan (Simon & Schuster, approx €15.99, out March 5) With her newest book, Scanlan is, as ever, on top form with the story of an explosive Irish family reunion that reveals too many secrets. Spanning generation­s and four feisty women – Marie Claire, Brigid, Keelin and Imelda – one night means their lives will never quite be the same again. Her best yet.

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