At present I’m finding it ‘unputdownable’ and have just come in slightly late to work as a result! I’m very surprised that you didn’t get it picked up by a publisher, except I suppose that it falls between niches. No wonder you sacked your agent! Also, the historical bits of Israel and Palestine are sensitive to some I suppose. I do enjoy the style – it’s varied in tone, and the characters (though some are a bit unlikely) are nevertheless interesting and likeable.
What a wonderful book!! I was given it for Christmas and just couldn't put it down. A fascinating and intriguing story so intricately interwoven . . . and I want more! I found the story line gripping, moving and humorous. Candy's Children also fascinated me as I was introduced to aspects of Palestine about which I had previously known nothing. I enjoyed all the characters and would love to know even more about each of their stories ... each character could have a story of their own and I hope she'll write is for us!! . . . and I am REALLY pleased it ended as it did.
Having learnt a little about the author I now admire the book even more!
Sylvia Murphy has self-published this superior saga some years after writing novels for Hodder& Stoughton and Gollancz. So it is fair to ask whether there are qualitative differences between Candy's Children and the output of the principal London houses. Yes, the novel has a dreary cover (!); and one guesses that some London editors woould have urged Murphy to flesh out one or two important episodes in the story. Perhaps, too, this kind of novel, with melodramatic events involving glamorous characters in a variety of international locations, is not as fashionable as it once was. But anyone who enjoyes the fiction of Penny Vicenzi, say, will get pleasure from Candy's Children. Murphy's prose is often startlingly apt and her scene-setting is authentic. It is not surprising that the author rushes certain elements of her plot because she packs so much into her 300 pages. Her heroine, born in Palestine before the second world war, has an illegitimate child she believes, wrongly, to have died; emigrating to England she marries a pilot, and also believes wrongly that he has died; then she marries a matinee idol; then an Earl. When her ill-assorted family gathers for her funeral a gloriously over-the-top finale ensues.
I loved the Candy Story. It's sort of huge but intimate at the same time and you never know what is coming next and you get the feeling it could go on for ever - Candy, the sequel?
Candy's Children is such an enthralling story, had the novel been snapped up by a publishing house, I'm certain it would be a best-seller. The story is superbly paced with memorable characters, an immensely enjoyable book to read. The visual impact of Sylvia Murphy's excellent writing would make this book an exciting TV mini series. Drama, mystery, pathos, rags to riches, it's all there.
Just thought you might like to know that my new book , CANDY'S CHILDREN is gathering some excellent reviews and is obviously being read by people I have never met. Thanks, folks, and if you have read it and enjoyed please tell everyone else about it - better still, give your friends a copy for their birthdays. They'll bless you as they sit in those queues at Heathrow.
More reviews on SylviaMurphyReadersAndWriters.blogspot.com
RRP £10.95 + £2.00 p&p