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The Hamiltons #9

Come Rain, Come Shine

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Newlyweds Alexander and Clare Hamilton intend to run Andrew's family home as a guest house and use the income to buy land for Andrew to farm, but social, political, and religious upheavals jeopardize their plans.

224 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 2012

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About the author

Anne Doughty

30 books14 followers
Anne Doughty was born in Armagh. She is the author of A Few Late Roses (longlisted for the Irish Times fiction prize), Stranger in the Place and Summer of the Hawthorn. After many years in England she returned to Belfast in 1998 and wrote the first of a series of stand-alone novels that make up the Hamiltons sequence.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Geri.
12 reviews42 followers
February 27, 2013
This review was originally published by the Historical Novel Society in the Historical Novel Review, February 2013.

Ireland in the early 1960s: Savvy, sophisticated Clare Hamilton returns from France to her native Armagh to marry Andrew, her childhood sweetheart, and run his ancestral home as a B&B. Business goes well for a time but falls off with the rise of package holidays abroad and sectarian violence in nearby Ulster, leaving Clare and Andrew finding it difficult to make ends meet. Clare is the creative, upbeat, come-rain, come-shine heroine, while Andrew is pleasant but struggles to create a successful law practice and really wants to be a farmer.

This is the fourth novel in Doughty’s Hamilton sequence and covers the time period 1960 to 1966. Come Rain, Come Shine is a smooth read with likeable characters. Armagh and the places Clare and Andrew visit are beautifully evoked — the author’s familiarity with the landscape comes through. Doughty captures the classic Irish phrasing and culture so much it made me smile.

But I felt that for the time period, Clare and Andrew had more luxury-related problems than the general population at a time when unemployment was rife. Andrew refuses a lordship but wants to farm, loses his law partnership, and gets cheap office rent in Armagh. I wished for a bit more conflict and deeper antagonists with higher stakes, particularly in the time when the North of Ireland was riddled with dissent and violence between Catholics and Protestants.
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