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The Still Shore is a sweeping, slow-burn Irish love story about what remains when the storm has passed - and who we become when silence lasts too long. In 1970s Clare, on the rugged edge of the Atlantic, a young factory worker named Niall Kavanagh hides from the fallout of a failed strike and a past he can't forget. When a London journalist, Ruth Fallon, arrives to report on the community's decline, their paths collide on a rain-swept road that neither was meant to travel. What begins as wary companionship becomes something deeper - an intimacy forged from long silences, half-truths, and the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Still Shore is a sweeping, slow-burn Irish love story about what remains when the storm has passed - and who we become when silence lasts too long. In 1970s Clare, on the rugged edge of the Atlantic, a young factory worker named Niall Kavanagh hides from the fallout of a failed strike and a past he can't forget. When a London journalist, Ruth Fallon, arrives to report on the community's decline, their paths collide on a rain-swept road that neither was meant to travel. What begins as wary companionship becomes something deeper - an intimacy forged from long silences, half-truths, and the fragile hope that two people from opposite sides of Ireland's divides might still find each other in the ruins of their plans. But time in Liscannor does not forgive easily. Old debts surface; the sea claims its due. As Ruth unearths the secrets that bind the town - a strike, a betrayal, a letter never sent - she and Niall are forced to choose between truth and safety, love and survival. Their story unfolds against the backdrop of a country in transformation: labour disputes, vanished sons, mothers keeping vigil by the tide. Every revelation carries the weight of loss and the quiet strength of those who stay. Told in lyrical, cinematic prose, The Still Shore evokes the wet salt air and dim light of Ireland's west coast - a place where grief is an inheritance and love an act of rebellion. Laura Carpenter delivers a deeply human historical romance about endurance, courage, and what it means to return to yourself after the world has changed. For readers of Maggie O'Farrell, Colm Tóibín, and Sarah Winman, this is a novel of rain-soaked tenderness and the resilience of ordinary people living through extraordinary times. Sometimes love survives not because it is easy - but because it refuses to die.
Autorenporträt
About the Author Laura Carpenter writes cinematic, emotionally charged romance and thrillers with Irish heart, razor-edged stakes, and lived-in tenderness. Her stories blend love and danger, intimacy and aftermath-where every bruise has meaning and every act of mercy leaves a mark. Born and raised in Dublin and Belfast, Laura builds entire worlds rooted in realism, resilience, and the quiet power of connection. Her work explores the edges of devotion-how far we'll go to protect the people and places we love, and what forgiveness really costs when the storm clears. When she isn't finishing another book, she's already plotting the next one-usually over strong tea, soft music, and too many notes in the margins.