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Bluethroat Morning Kindle Edition

3.6 out of 5 stars 42 ratings

‘A moving read, threaded through with mystery & excitement.’ – Good Housekeeping Magazine

‘Every word is magical, almost luminous.’ –
Daily Mail

‘A literary masterpiece.’ –
My Chestnut Reading Tree

‘There are many elements to savour in this novel. Lofthouse has a fine eye for the bleak Norfolk landscape and how it both reflects and affects characters’ moods.’ –
Tracy Chevalier

Alison Bliss, celebrity model and author, walks into the sea one ‘bluethroat morning’. In death she becomes a greater icon than in life. The seaside Norfolk village where she lived becomes a place of pilgrimage.

Six years later her husband Harry, a schoolteacher, is still haunted by her suicide and faithful to her memory. Until he meets Helen and they fall in love. Harry and Helen return to the Norfolk beach, the scene of Alison’s death, where they meet 98-year-old Ern Higham.

There, a tale is revealed that has been generations in the making. As Harry pieces together a tragic history, he discovers that to truly move forward, first he must understand the past ... ____________________________________________________________________________________

‘A classic tale of longing.’ –
Time Out

‘Simply stunning.’ –
Being Anne

'An impeccable piece of fiction that has the feel of a literary classic.’ –
The Book Magnet

'Gorgeous prose & deeply addictive.' –
Liz Loves Books

'Sensual, hauntingly poignant, memorable.' –
Fictionophile

'Poetic & sophisticated.' –
What's Better Than Books

'Evocative, powerful, atmospheric.' –
Goodreads

‘Captures the spacey feel of Norfolk well – an engaging read, intriguingly structured, tough in some of its insights, and sexy too.’ –
Lindsay Clarke, author of The Chymical Wedding, winner of the Whitbread Prize for Fiction

‘This is a considerable piece, full of subtle characterization and a well-chosen raft of literary underpinnings.’ –
Publishing News

‘The intertwining of the two main stories is very skilfully done, as is the delicacy and understanding she brings to the key themes – suicide, creativity, love and especially paternal love. Very moving.’ –
Henry Sutton, novelist and co-director MA Creative Writing, UEA
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Six years ago, Harry Bliss's wife Alison, former model and acclaimed author, walked into the sea. She left behind a brief note and a pile of ashes-- all that remained of the novel in which she had immersed herself for months. Oddly captivated by an old sepia photograph of Harry's great-grandfather Charles and his second wife Arabella, Alison was intent on creating a narrative for and about them. As she wrote in her journal, "Think of the striations of the rock at Marsden. No longer shifting of subterranean, the rock now solid; made permanent. The sea's erosion has revealed the layering of time; the pattern beneath the surface. So my imagination must erode the past. The form of the art-work has simply to be revealed."

But what happened when that revelation occurred? What parallels between past and present, self and art, did she find? Harry had been only vaguely aware of Alison's project. Shell-shocked by her suicide, he is only just beginning to emerge from a haze of grief and confusion when he meets Helen, a young woman who looks disturbingly like Arabella. The resemblance spurs both Harry and Helen-- who naively idolizes Alison--to try to unravel the fascination that that photograph held for her, and in doing so, to lay to rest the guilt that haunts Harry. But in traveling to Glaven, the tiny town where Alison spent her final weeks, Harry finds himself caught in a gossamer web of coincidence. As a 90- year-old villager tells Harry, Arabella had drowned herself as well. Harry's growing awareness of the tragic history Alison had discovered underscores his own attempts to understand his wife's last days.

The novel purports to be an exploration of the intersection of female self and literary self. And indeed, the questions at which it hints are in the traditional realm of feminist scholarship: What is the relationship between creativity and fertility? How do female artists reject or subvert a patriarchal system of authority? Must daughters tell their mothers' stories?

But why, then, is Harry's voice the loudest of all? Melodramatically anguished, but undeniably self-complacent, he reigns supreme over the novel, reducing all others to two-dimensional ciphers. Were there any awareness that Harry's obsession has nothing to do with his wife and everything to do with himself, the novel could be a fascinating indictment of the ways in which female creativity can be filtered and muted by a male audience. But both Harry and author Jacqui Lofthouse (The Temple of Hymen) play things perfectly straight. When Harry pouts, upon reading Alison's journal, the reader is expected to sympathize with his self-absorption: "She was intent on her journey but her ultimate goal was obscure. Only one thing was clear: I was not a part of it. At her death, a great chasm of silence opened in my heart. But Alison, in her last notebook, did not pause to contemplate my loss."

When Alison finally speaks for herself in those journal pages, her words are vigorous and devastating, putting Harry's self-absorbed rambling to shame. What a pity, then, that her words are so few. They hint at what her unfinished novel might have been. More ironically, they hint at what Lofthouse's own text could have become. --Kelly Flynn

From Publishers Weekly

Lofthouse's second novel, after The Temple of Hymen, is an intelligently crafted but uninspired psychological suspense story, a whydunit about the suicide of a woman who seemed to have little reason to kill herself. Six years after the death of his young wife, one-time supermodel Alison Oakley, 58-year-old Harry Bliss walks out on his London teaching job barely a week before he is due to retire. He is determined to visit Glaven, the small English town where Alison lived before she walked into the ocean one "bluethroat morning," and discover what exactly led up to her death. After a descent into anorexia at the end of her modeling career, Alison recovered by writing a bestselling, prize-winning novel about the modeling industry. Around the same time, she met and married Harry, who gave her the time and privacy to write. Though bestsellerdom proved nearly as stressful as supermodeldom, Alison had retreated to Glaven and was working apace on her next novel, when she apparently destroyed her manuscript and took her life. Why? Harry is not alone in his quest. He is accompanied by Helen Cregar, the 19-year-old daughter of his best friend and the only woman who has interested him since his wife's death, and followed by hangers-on, journalists and even another academic. The clues Harry needs most are given up slowly by nonagenarian Ern Higham, who teaches Harry about white-throated and blue-throated birds and keeps safe one of Alison's last possessions. Lofthouse convincingly captures Harry's fusty and sorrowful presence, and the passages from Alison's perspective are engaging and penetrating. But no matter how skillfully Lofthouse manages the revelations of her multiple parallel stories, her voice is muted and the narrative lacks resonance. (July)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07BK9VGDD
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Blackbird Digital Books
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 22, 2018
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 659 KB
  • Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 342 pages
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 16 - 18 years
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.6 out of 5 stars 42 ratings

About the author

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Jacqui Lofthouse
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Jacqui Lofthouse is the author of four novels 'The Temple of Hymen', 'Bluethroat Morning' 'Een Stille Verdwijning' and 'The Modigliani Girl'. Her novels have sold over 100,000 copies in the UK, the USA and Europe and have been widely reviewed.

Jacqui began her career as an actor touring India as Sheila in J.B. Priestley's 'An Inspector Calls'. She went on to study Drama and English at the University of Bristol and subsequently worked in radio production and media training. In 1992 she studied for her MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia under Sir Malcolm Bradbury and Rose Tremain.

Jacqui has taught creative writing in a broad variety of settings including from City University to Feltham Young Offenders Institution. She has also taught English and Drama in London secondary schools.

In 2005, Jacqui founded The Writing Coach, a coaching and mentoring organisation for writers (www.thewritingcoach.co.uk). She is currently working on her first YA novel and returning to actor training at Identity School of Acting. She has recently been cast in four short films. Jacqui is delighted that Blackbird Digital Books are publishing the first digital edition of 'Bluethroat Morning' in May 2018.

Customer reviews

3.6 out of 5 stars
42 global ratings

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2019
    Take this journey with Harry! Go to Glaven, try to unravel madness and melancholy! Why did Allison commit suicide? Why?
    2 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2018
    I have to admit that the first few chapters of this book had me wondering whether to continue or give up. I came to the conclusion that this extremely descriptive and well written novel has to be read at a leisurely pace to absorb the intricate details of the storyline. A fascinating and haunting mystery. Thanks to TBC Reviewer Group for giving me the opportunity to read this book.
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2019
    I was expecting a bit more thriller from the advertisements I'd seen for this book. It was more a retrospective about Harold and his life. He is a teacher who still mourns his wife who committed suicide 6 years ago. Set in Norfolk , England Harold reminisces about his wife Allison who was almost 20 years younger than him. Now Harry has met Helen and he wonders if he can forget about his dead wife. I received a copy of this ARC in exchange for a fair and honest review.
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2020
    I marveled at beautifully written passages at the beginning of reading this book and at points along the way to the end. However, I grew increasingly annoyed at jarring inconsistencies and contrivance with the plot so that the pretty words all felt hollow.
    The writer is so clumsily obvious with her desire to reveal the extreme "connectedness" of everything that she overplays events to erroneously portray them as being significant in Allison's life. At the end, however, the husband and readers discover the former events are actually quite insignificant! WHAT? Why did the writer cram the theory down our throats only to back off of it at the end? Does she consider this misleading thread to be some kind of "literary" red herring? No. It is just bad writing.
    The plot is so weak that it ends not with a bang, but a whimper. Several characters and events are frayed, dangling threads with little reason for being. Lofthouse is obviously capable of beautiful expression, but she fails at telling a good story.
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2000
    Unfortunately, despite its literary deftness, this psychological suspense/mystery novel is like so many others of its type, i.e., it builds up the reader's expectations to a high pitch, and then peters out at its conclusion, as if the author had simply run out of ideas/interest/time, and decided just to be done with the thing.
    I heartily concur with the previous reviewers regarding Ms. Lofthouse's exceptional writing talent, but it is wasted here. Her plot revolves around the efforts of Harry, the widower of Alison, a famous model who had abandoned the fashion world to become a novelist, to discover the reason(s) for her suicide and to come to terms with it. Complicating Harry's search for answers are Alison's posthumous idealization by the reading public and a relentless media scrutiny, coupled with the fact she went to her death in the same manner and at the same place as did an ancestress of Harry's, who also happened to be the subject of Alison's current novel-in-progress at the time of her death.
    While I generally feel that the most compelling fictional characters are those who are portrayed as flawed, just like regular folks, Ms. Lofthouse's cast is primarily a self-centered, self-seeking, whining bunch. I am old enough to have witnessed the human wreckage and waste that has been left in the wake of those who lived by the '60's slogan, "If it feels good, do it," and am disappointed to find it alive and well, albeit in a fictional tale. Frankly, by the time I reached the conclusion, I would not have minded if a few more of these people had walked into the ocean so that they could not inflict any more pain those around them.
    Lastly, a pet peeve -- I find it extremely irritating when a writer with an exceptional command of language resorts to using male locker room vocabulary to refer to male and female anatomy, sexual activity, etc., especially when it occurs in a third-person narrative format, as it does in this case. Judging by her novel as a whole, Ms. Lofthouse can certainly do better than that.
    3 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2000
    The book is about a model, Alison, who struggles with anorexia, then becomes a successful author when she writes a semi-autobiographical book about the fashion industry. She finds an old photograph in her husband's house of one of his ancestors with his wife and becomes intrigued with the unhappy-looking woman in the photo. She finds out that the woman in the picture committed suicide by walking into the sea and goes to the town where it all happened to do research and write her second book about this woman, Arabella. The twist, which you learn very early on in the first chapter (so I'm not giving anything away here), is that Alison ends up committing suicide by doing the exact same thing in the very place that Arabella did it and her husband is left to unravel the mystery of her death.
    This was a real page turner and very well written. The plot sucked me in like a Hoover and didn't let go until the very end when it builds to a dramatic conclusion. Wonderful read!!!!!
    3 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2018
    This was a book that I quite enjoyed reading; and I really liked that there was depth to some of the characters. I voluntarily reviewed an Advance Reader Copy of this book.

Top reviews from other countries

  • A. E. R.
    5.0 out of 5 stars An absorbing mystery exploring obsession and family secrets
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 27, 2018
    Although I was driven to find out what happened, this was so lyrically written and so deeply emotional that I had to read it slowly and savour every moment

    A literary thriller, yes, with important themes about women artists and suicide, as well as the mysteries of love and passion.

    This one will linger in my mind.
  • Delia
    3.0 out of 5 stars It was a disappointment to me
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 1, 2019
    I just could not "get into" this book for some reason. I love a good story but somehow this one did not pull me in. Maybe I am too old at 78 for it. I could not get past the first 50 pages. Sorry!
  • Book addict
    2.0 out of 5 stars Overlong
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 13, 2018
    The main character in the book was I thought absolutely self obsessed. All under the veneer of ‘the great writer’. The character of her husband irritated me too....weak. The writing was very good but the whole novel was too wrung out.
    The main character had committed suicide. The rest of the book was devoted to her husband’s search for the reason. I nodded off towards the end.
  • PaulineO
    1.0 out of 5 stars Tedious, frustrating........the telephione directory instead
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 8, 2018
    I rarely write book reviews as I feel writing, like all art, finds it's beauty in the eye of the beholder. However, so disappointed was I with this book that I felt compelled to share my opinion, for what it's worth.
    Firstly, the characters are barely one dimensional. They are not engaging, on any level. While each of them clearly plays a part in the 'plot', so thin are their personalities that I had no interest them or how matters affected them or how their problems were resolved.
    The writing style is indeed literary and could be pleasing to read, however so little happens in the story that it is extremely tedious and frustrating to read and when something does happen ( and trust me not much does) the length of time that it takes to get the reader through the so called revelation is so long that one actually couldn't care less and found myself skimming through the book to reach the end. I felt relieved to have reached it's conclusion as I felt I was wasting good reading time on a flimsy plot, unsympathetic characters and wrting style so pedestrian as to be almost stationary at times.
    Obviously this is just my opinion...….you might love it.
  • DP Lewis
    5.0 out of 5 stars Evocative, powerful and atmospheric
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 26, 2018
    If you're a fan of intense relationships, deeply felt emotion and penetrating psycholohical exploration, then this is the literary thriller for you. I was deeply moved by the sensual writing style which is undeniably beautiful, even lyrical at times and yet does not detract from the authenticity and relevance of the novel's contemporary themes: love, fame, depression and the media.

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