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Amanda Prowse

Author of The Food of Love

46 Works 880 Members 126 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Amanda Prowse

Series

Works by Amanda Prowse

The Food of Love (2016) 66 copies, 8 reviews
The Art of Hiding (2017) 63 copies, 28 reviews
What Have I Done? (No Greater Love) (2013) 48 copies, 1 review
Perfect Daughter (No Greater Courage) (2015) 44 copies, 1 review
The Idea of You (2017) 43 copies, 20 reviews
Will You Remember Me? (No Greater Love) (2014) 37 copies, 4 reviews
A Mother's Story (2015) 36 copies, 1 review
The Day She Came Back (2020) 35 copies, 8 reviews
The Girl in the Corner (2018) 34 copies, 3 reviews
Anna (2018) 34 copies, 3 reviews
A Little Love (2014) 32 copies
Theo (2018) 32 copies, 1 review
The Christmas Cafe (No Greater Love) (2015) 30 copies, 2 reviews
Christmas For One (2014) 28 copies, 1 review
Clover's Child (2013) 28 copies, 1 review
The Things I Know (2019) 27 copies, 7 reviews
An Ordinary Life (2021) 27 copies, 7 reviews
The Coordinates of Loss (2018) 25 copies, 3 reviews
Poppy Day (2011) 24 copies, 1 review
The Light in the Hallway (2019) 19 copies, 4 reviews
Another Love (2016) 15 copies, 3 reviews
Picking up the Pieces (2023) 13 copies, 3 reviews
Waiting to Begin (2021) 13 copies, 3 reviews
All Good Things (2023) 12 copies, 3 reviews
I Won't Be Home for Christmas (2016) 11 copies, 1 review
To Love and Be Loved (2022) 9 copies, 4 reviews
Women Like Us: A Memoir (2022) 6 copies
Very Very Lucky (2024) 6 copies
The Second Chance Cafe (2016) 6 copies
Swimming to Lundy (2024) 4 copies
Imogen's Baby (2016) 3 copies
The Game (2013) 2 copies
A Christmas Wish (2013) 2 copies, 3 reviews
En mors historie (2016) 1 copy
Was habe ich getan? (2016) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

A nice little Christmas short story to beat the rainy gloom. It has everything you would expect from a Christmas story: sweetness, moments of laughter and tears, happy endings, predictability. Don't expect much, and you'll not be disappointed.
 
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RoshReviews | 2 other reviews | Jul 30, 2024 |
A heart breaking book, that took me on a journey of courage, loss, and determination. An ordinary life that is nothing but that, and sometimes sacrifices needed to do can leave us forever wounded.
 
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simonamitac | 6 other reviews | Nov 27, 2023 |
Well, things are never as they seem, as we have all learned from social media. And this story follows two families that live next door to each other. One family is struggling. The mother is depressed and stays in bed or her room all the time. Their house is falling apart and the daughter, Daisy, always feels like she is not spectacular and not seen. The other family is perfect…or seems to be in Daisy’s eyes. They have the perfect home, lots of money, and just seem to be the golden family. But soon the cracks start to show!

I really enjoyed all the family drama in this novel. This is like a soap opera. And daisy is such a cute character. She is in love with the Kelleway’s son. She knows that this whole family is flawless. And she needs them in her life….she wants their life. But, does she really?

As the Kelleway’s world starts to crumble, other secrets come out and Daisy starts to see exactly what the Kelleway’s world is all about!

Need a good family drama…THIS IS IT! Grab your copy today.

I received the novel from the author for a honest review.
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fredreeca | 2 other reviews | Sep 12, 2023 |
All Good Things by Amanda Prowse is a recommended family drama.

Daisy Harrop envies the Kelleway family next door. Compared to her family, with her mother depressed and sleeping all the time, her father working hard, her brother up in his room, the Kelleway family seem perfect from a distance. She looks out her window watching them and wishing she could be a part of their life, especially if it meant dating their grandson, Cass.

Winnie Kelleway is a clueless vain woman who is proud of her beautiful family. Now Winnie and Bernie are celebrating their 40th wedding anniversary at an Italian restaurant with all their family present and on display for everyone to envy them. The restaurant they celebrate at is the one where Daisy works, so she gets to see the event first hand.

The narrative is told through the point-of-view of the characters and it becomes clear after a very slow start that everything is not as Daisy believes it is and her family is not even close to how Winnie views them. As more points-of-view are brought into the story, it does become more complex and interesting. Clearly Daisy and Winnie are seeing what they want to believe and don't really know what is going on.

This is a "the grass is always greener on the other side" plot. However, beginning the novel with Daisy's musings made this feel like a YA book and then visiting Winnie's internal dialogue made this almost a DNF. It was simply an okay book for me but fans of Prowse will likely enjoy it much more.
Disclosure: My review copy was courtesy of Lake Union Publishing via NetGalley.
http://www.shetreadssoftly.com/2023/08/all-good-things.html
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SheTreadsSoftly | 2 other reviews | Aug 25, 2023 |

Awards

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Statistics

Works
46
Members
880
Popularity
#29,101
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
126
ISBNs
252
Languages
6
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs