A fun holiday read filled with self deprecating Irish humor. 7/10
A fun holiday read filled with self deprecating Irish humor. 7/10
This was my #bookspin for March - I really enjoyed it. My cousin from Ireland sent it to me and it was delightful. If you're a fan of The Derry Girls, this will be up your alley!
@thearomaofbooks #bookspin March
Book mail from my cousin in Ireland!!!
1. Hang out with my grandson on Friday.
2. I love to read by a lake.
3. Hmmm...I cant think of one but I may come back to this.
@Cupcake12 #motivationalmonday
This book was recommended to me by a friend and I just couldn‘t put it down. It‘s so funny and interesting. Highly recommend #5 read a book recommended by a friend
'The Importance of Being Aisling' extract...
' "Never scrimp on tyres or towels and your journeys will be safe and your arse will be dry." One of Daddy's pearls of wisdom.' -Pg 406-407
'Watching Sinead sweep up the aisle with her dad earlier was hard too, but sure we all float on.' -Pg 375
'They both loved Phil Collins. 'Groovy Kind of Love' came out the year they got married and any time it ever came on the radio, in the kitchen or the car, Daddy would sing it tunelessly at her. So we swayed to that at his funeral, and cried. It was fierce sad, but lovely.' -Pg 375
'Already nine o'clock and I haven't cried yet, if you don't count the little hiccup on my walk - not too shabby.' -Pg 360
'The grief has been sneaking up on me at the most unlikely times - I passed an old man pushing a toddler on a swing on the walk in here and completely broke down. Daddy would have made the best Grandad. My sadness intensifies when I think of how my own future kids have been denied him...' -Pg 360
'Sadhbh's voice is wobbly and immediately I think about Mammy and what she went through twenty years ago (abortion), and here's Sadbhb dealing with the same thing. I'm surprised by the anger I feel bubbling up inside me about the journeys (Ireland to Liverpool/London) Mammy and Sadbhb had to take...' -Pg 338
'In the past forty-eight hours, from the most unlikely sources, I've learned more about Daddy than I had in the previous twenty-eight years.' -Pg 335
'...now he was leaving her alone. I suppose I had only ever really seen them as Mammy and Daddy before. Parents, not as people with their own separate relationships and hopes and dreams and jokes and lives. It's finally time to grow up.' -Pg 332
'If ever there was a time to eat my feelings, this is it. Weight Watchers Maura is always warning about the dangers of 'eating your feelings', but I don't think an apple and a glass of water and waiting half an hour are going to help this time, Maura. Just have the Boumty, Maura. You never stop going on about them.' -Pg 332
'Ive never felt more alone. My Daddy. My safety. My heart. He minded me all those years and I only managed to mind him for a fraction of it. My Daddy.' -Pg 323
'I know what she's saying, but at the same time she can't be actually saying it, can she?
"Do you understand what I'm saying to you, Marian? Aisling?" Still in her doctors voice but lower now.
" He's going to die." My Daddy. My strong Daddy.' -Pg 322
(Talking about abortion)
' "And sure it's everywhere now. The young ones think it's their fight. And it is, now. But it's a fight that's been going on for years. I just wasn't much use in helping." She sounds wrecked.
"Ah, Mammy. Don't say that. It's not your job to change things."
"It shouldn't be yours either, Aisling. But you can help (friend). The poor craythur. Look after her." ' - Pg 309
'..."We didn't want another baby. We couldn't have another baby. We had our babies. And when I went to Dr Maher again, I knew I was pregnant. I told him I didn't want it, I couldn't have it, and he told me I wasn't the first and I wouldn't be the last." -Pg 307
(An Irish woman on getting an abortion):
' "It was hard enough to scrape together enough to go to Liverpool at all"... "Do you think I'm awful?"
"No... no, Mammy. I just... I just didn't think people... well, parents really did that."
"Sure aren't your parents people, Aisling?" ' -Pg 306
'I feel very much on the verge of tears and wouldn't mind a silent weep as I look out the window. Don't they say planes make you more likely to cry anyway? Something about the altitude and the idea that you might die at any moment. Sure that'd get anyone's nerves up.' -Pg 254
'It's nice to not be the organiser for once, even if I can't help but panic about, well, basically everything...' -Pg 230
'Dr Maher answers for me. "You're coming in too, Aisling?" It's a question but mostly a command, an acknowledgement that maybe we'll need a second pair of eyes and ears in the room. Another adult. I'm the adult.' -Pg 167-168
'I suddenly consider for the first time in all my years on earth that they've been through all this before. They've had first kisses and first loves and break-ups and heartbreaks. Sure of course they had lives before I came along, dancing to local showbands and drinking glasses of Guinness.' -Pg 99 (... musings on her Mammy and Daddy)
'I tell myself that I'm a woman of the world and I don't need a man or a wedding to fulfil me and I'm a great feminist like Beyonce - although it was her singing about putting the ring on it, so maybe she needs to have a word with herself.' - Pg 68
I wasn't sure how much I'd like this book (despite the fact I am Irish and this is definitely an Irish based novel lol) but I loved it 😊 fun and full of heart ❤️ 📚 #irishauthors #MayBooks
Brilliant and funny!! Every Irish person has an Aisling in their life or knows one. Easy and fun read.