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No Greater Strength #2

The Christmas Café

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Bea is fifty three, and she's just lost her husband after thirty years of marriage. To distract herself from grief, she throws herself into her work running the Reservoir Street Kitchen in one of Sydney's most fashionable districts.

But then an email from a cafe-owner in Edinburgh prompts her to take a trip to Scotland in the depths of winter. Her journey will be one of self-discovery, as she is drawn back to a secret past - and a secret love - that she has tried to forget.

Set between Sydney and Edinburgh at Christmas, this is a story of family ties, lost love, and the power of the past.

PREVIOUS BOOKS:

POPPY DAY

WHAT HAVE I DONE

CLOVER'S CHILD

A LITTLE LOVE

WILL YOU REMEMBER ME?

A MOTHER'S STORY

PERFECT DAUGHTER

321 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 31, 2015

709 people are currently reading
945 people want to read

About the author

Amanda Prowse

83 books1,940 followers
Previous Book: 'Swimming to Lundy', published th August 2024'.

Latest Book: 'This One Life', published 7th January 2025.

Next Book: 'Ever After' published 7th August 2025.

Amanda Prowse is an International Bestselling author whose thirty-two novels, two non-fiction titles and ten novellas have been published in dozens of languages around the world. Published by Lake Union, Amanda is the most prolific writer of bestselling contemporary fiction in the UK today; her titles also consistently score the highest online review approval ratings across several genres. Her books, including the chart topping No.1 titles 'What Have I Done?', 'Perfect Daughter', 'My Husband's Wife', 'The Girl in the Corner' and ‘The Things I Know’ have sold millions of copies across the globe.

A popular TV and radio personality, Amanda has appeared on numerous shows where her views on family and social issues strike a chord with viewers. She also makes countless guest appearances on BBC national and independent Radio stations including LBC, Times Radio and Talk FM, where she is well known for her insightful observations and her infectious humour. Described by the Daily Mail as ‘The queen of family drama’ Amanda’s novel, 'A Mother's Story' won the coveted Sainsbury's eBook of the year Award and she has had two books selected as World Book Night titles, 'Perfect Daughter' in 2016 and 'The Boy Between' in 2022.

Amanda is a huge supporter of libraries and having become a proud ambassador for The Reading Agency, works tirelessly to promote reading, especially in disadvantaged areas. Amanda's ambition is to create stories that keep people from turning the bedside lamp off at night, great characters that ensure you take every step with them and tales that fill your head so you can't possibly read another book until the memory fades...

Praise for Amanda Prowse:

'A powerful and emotional work of fiction' - Piers Morgan

'Deeply moving and emotional, Amanda Prowse handles her explosive subjects with delicate skill' - Daily Mail

'Uplifting and positive, but you will still need a box of tissues' - Hello!

'A gut-wrenching and absolutely brilliant read' - The Irish Sun

'You'll fall in love with this...' - Cosmopolitan

'Deeply moving and eye opening. Powerful and emotional drama that packs a real punch.' - Heat

'Magical' - Now magazine

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 136 reviews
Profile Image for Jennifer (Jaye).
1,098 reviews64 followers
August 30, 2025
*Second Chances*

Set in Australia, this gentle and emotional story follows Bea, who found love with a man named John when she was 18 and he was 23. However, John had to leave her life because he was married. He was a young doctor from Edinburgh who had been in Australia for a few months.

Bea found herself alone and, due to her religious family, was kicked out. She was left with the life-changing gift of being pregnant from her liaison with John.

Eventually, after living hand to mouth she was rescued by the man she would eventually marry. He was more like her best friend, but being so much older than her, he always said he loved her enough for both of them. After nearly 30 years of marriage, she became a widow in her early 50s.

Never once did she forget about John. She chose to imagine him dead in order to move on from the pain she felt.

Because of the circumstances, she never told her son who his father was. Through trying to protect him, little did she know that her son was harbouring underlying resentment towards her.

When she received an email from a cafe owner in Edinburgh, she decided to reply. She end up as email penpals.

When the opportunity arose for her to go to Edinburgh with her granddaughter, this turns out to be a complete life-changing experience.
Profile Image for Sarah.
2,950 reviews222 followers
December 13, 2018
The story starts of with Bea at her dying husbands bedside. It did make for some very emotional reading but it drew me to Bea instantly and by the end of the story she felt like an old friend.

I loved the story being set in Australia, which is very different to what Christmas is like here in England. Bea lives in a flat above her business of which she loves listening to the hustle and bustle from below. Whilst it’s something that would probably put me off, the author totally sold me on Bea’s home and I could easily envision Bea sat there listening to the world go by.

Another character I really liked in the novel is Flora, Bea’s grand-daughter. She is coming up to fourteen and is struggling with life as a teenager. Wyatt, Bea’s son and Flora’s dad, I wasn’t to sure of to start with. He doesn’t seem to have much time for his mum and I felt for Bea as she makes the most of seeing Flora.

I think this story is a great reminder of how we can become self absorbed and forget about our loved ones. It really makes you sit back and think and try to understand others more. There is also the romance aspect to do with Bea and her past and it makes for an engrossing read.

The Second Chance Café is a lovely heart felt read that I didn’t want to put down. I was entranced by the authors writing and loved getting to know Bea better as well as her friends and family. I enjoyed all the highs and lows with Bea and whilst I loved the ending to the story, I was also very sad to have reached the end. A lovely read that will leave you feeling all warm and cosy inside.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
Author 4 books148 followers
October 23, 2015
Originally reviewed on http://beccasbooooks.blogspot.co.uk/2...

There are hundreds and thousands of Amanda Prowse fans, fans that told me, during my reading of A Christmas Cafe, that Prowse is one of their most favourite authors. As I progressed further into this beautifully weaved, superbly told novel, I began to understand why. I can't believe that The Christmas Cafe is the first novel I've read by Amanda Prowse, but I can tell you now that it certainly won't be the last. I was utterly charmed by this story, enchanted even, and felt like I could only come up for air once I'd turned the last page.

Prowse reeled me in from the very beginning of A Christmas Cafe, teasing me with tiny morsels of mystery and intrigue, and hinting towards a past which Bea, the heroine in this novel, just couldn't forget, regardless of how much time had passed. After the death of her husband, Bea's mind was finally free to wander, and just as she knew it would, it returned to the same man who had taken up residence in her mind for years upon years. With Prowse's delicate-as-a-rose imagery and unpicking of emotions, it was clear to see that this man, whoever he had been, had been more than just a fleeting love affair, someone who she had never once forgotten about. These delicious hints towards a past I knew nothing about spurred me on throughout my reading of this novel, so eager and desperate was I to delve into Bea's history to find out what had happened so long ago, and who the man was who had never left her side, not spiritually anyway.

The pacing of The Christmas Cafe was absolutely superb. Not once did I find a lull or dip in the novel, not once did I find myself questioning something in the plot. In fact, I absolutely flew through the pages, excitement and adrenalin coursing through my veins when parts of Bea's life began to unravel. From Sydney Australia, with it's scorching heat even during Christmas, to Edinburgh Scotland, with it's snowy pavements and freezing temperatures, Prowse truly gave me a feast for each and every sense. Her descriptions were spot-on, her choice of words so beautifully put to use, only ever giving me the full-effect of what her characters were doing/seeing/tasting/feeling. The plot was gripping, at times a tad torturous, but on the whole, incredibly moving, emotional and satisfying with a cast of characters who left a lasting impression on me.

The heroine of The Christmas Cafe, Beatrice, Bea for short, was a character who I warmed to and sympathised with immediately. What I loved most about Bea was the fact that, despite her predicament which she'd found herself in, she was still completely loving and wholesome, a real golden-hearted woman, who I utterly adored, not only for her winning personality and gentle nature, but because she felt so real to me. The deli which she ran within the novel was so obviously her pride and joy, and I loved the scenes which took place within it, alongside her two lovely friends Nait and Kim, and Mr Giraldi, a disgruntled but amusing customer! Prowse brought forward the deeper issues between Bea and her son Wyatt, and her granddaughter too, who I also loved, and who I felt brought her own style of joy and warmth to the novel, and proved to be a very entertaining contrast to her grandmother. There were moments of giggling on my part, coupled with a few stray emotional tears and, overall, one of those smiles, when I reached the end of The Christmas Cafe, that seemed to last forever.

With such a beautifully poignant and moving story, coupled with snowy Scotland, ever-lasting love and the ties that bond two people together throughout the decades, The Christmas Cafe warmed me from the inside out, like a frothy, rich hot chocolate, cradled in my hands on a cold and frosty night keeping me warm. I was gulping back my tears, stifling my gasps and hoping against hope that it wouldn't turn out to be too late for Bea. And overall, I think that's what really shone through from within this book. That life is too short, that you should take every chance that you're given to be truly, unconditionally happy, and that in the end, the only thing that matters is that you followed your heart and took your happiness with both hands and held it tightly. Distance, time and circumstances doesn't change when it comes to 'the one.' I loved Bea, I adored her story, and this will not, I repeat NOT, be the last novel I read by Amanda Prowse. Beautiful in every single way possible. FIVE GORGEOUS CUPCAKES from Becca's Books!
Profile Image for Bookread2day.
2,574 reviews63 followers
August 1, 2018


This story opens up with great sadness. After thirty years of marriage Fifty-five year old Bea, held on to the hands of her husband's Peter until his final breath in hospital. For Bea she was going home to a dark and quiet apartment, with Peter's belonging staring at her in each room she went in. She buries her grief in hard work at the deli she runs. A letter arrives for Bea from a lady cafe-owner in Scotland, she runs a kind of little forum for owners of coffee shops, tea rooms and boutique cafe's all over the world. They go online and swap recipes. Bea decides to take a trip to Scotland in the depths of winter. This is a festive treat for all Amanda Prowse fans.
Profile Image for Rachel (not currently receiving notifications) Hall.
1,047 reviews85 followers
December 21, 2018
Prosaic, entirely predictable & heavily padded women’s fiction with a festive theme.

Having read two books by Amanda Prowse with decidedly mixed experiences I opted to read The Christmas Café in the hope that with a widowed protagonist of over fifty it might bring some emotional depth to the usual festive fluff. Sadly everything about this novel screamed of being rushed and poorly thought out and for the fifty pages of genuine insight there was a good two hundred and fifty of filler material, including throwing in a teenager to reduce the value of any potentially poignant moments of reflection to immature amusement.

The novel opens with Bea at the death bed of her beloved husband, Peter, as he loses his fight with heart disease in a hospital in Sydney. Happily married for twenty-seven years and living in the comfortable Surry Hills district, Bea runs the Reservoir Street Kitchen while twenty-five year senior, Peter, supported her unconditionally in the background. Mourning for the all-consuming, passionate love that she could not offer to her life partner, Bea looks back on her history, from her estrangement from her parents to the first six year of Wyatt’s life that she spent alone in a King’s Cross bedsit. Peter offered Bea an escape but also a very different life to the one she had always dreamed of, from the awkward relationship shared between Wyatt and step-father Peter to Bea’s distant relationship with Wyatt, his wife Sarah and ebullient thirteen-year-old granddaughter, Flora, who she barely sees. As Bea muses on the passionate love that passed her by when Wyatt’s biological father returned home to his wife and twins and she was ostracised by her devout minister father, she reflects on how fortunate she was to find a second chance at happiness, love and companionship with Peter Greenstock.

The story is definitely a slow starter and the first third of the novel is given over to introducing the Reservoir Street Kitchen, employees Kim and Tait and what is in effect a replacement family for Bea, who feels like an inconvenience to her offhand son, Wyatt, and misses her fast maturing granddaughter. Holding out for a Christmas invite from Wyatt an irate Flora, who is running into trouble at school and at loggerheads with her parents “who don’t listen”, is unexpectedly landed on gran, Bea. An opportunity for Flora to have some time out comes with the added blessing of gran and granddaughter getting to know each other better as they share intimacies and discuss plans for a shared Christmas. When a mysterious letter from a cafe owner in Edinburgh inviting the Reservoir Street Kitchen to join a global forum of cafe owner sharing recipes, photos and advice it sees cheeky Flora establish an email friendship with The Christmas Café proprietor. The spirit of Peter urging his wife to “be brave” and grab every opportunity in life sees the duo swapping the sweltering beaches of Sydney for the snow lined streets and raw winds of Edinburgh at Yuletide. Little does Bea know (the reader is never in any doubt!), but her Christmas trip is about to set in a motion a very eventful twelve months, a chance to recapture her first true love and the blessing of improving family relations.

I didn’t so much mind the predictability of the story as the many questionable inconsistencies in the plot, from protagonist Bea being considered “old” at a mere fifty-three-years and her inability to email or navigate the internet whilst coping fine with running a business, operating a satnav system and using a mobile phone. The backstory that Prowse gives to her character is also a little baffling and with the novel set in 2013 and Bea telling Flora of the attitudes thirty-years ago when she was pregnant with an illegitimate child and strictly religious parents it certainly doesn’t tally with the late 1970s to early 1980s that I recognise. And, given Bea knew that Wyatt’s father, John, went home to Edinburgh would she really not have been intrigued and looked him up before now? And more importantly, would she go to the self same city and yet not have even have been tempted to contact him?

A disappointing read of minimal substance, unconvincing characters and limited emotional depth that struck a false note. The moments of occasionally moving prose on the changing nature of relationships as we mature and every family needing a translator to help them understand each other are few and far between. In hindsight I think replacing teenager, Flora, with an older travelling companion and a character with more life experience would have benefitted the novel greatly and set a maturer tone. As it is the forced humour of nigh on every scenario reduces the sentiment of the whole novel and debases the story to anodyne festive fare.
Profile Image for Clare .
851 reviews47 followers
January 6, 2020
Listened to in audio format.

I am a big fan of Amanda Prowse and I have read a number of her books.

The prologue left me with a lump in my throat. The story started with the death of fifty year old Bea`s husband Peter. Expat Bea was a single mother to her son Wyatt when she met Peter through work. They got married and although Peter adored Bea, Bea still had feelings for her first love.

Twelve months later Bea received an e-mail from Alex the owner of The Christmas Cafe in Edinburgh. Alex had invited her to join a forum for cafe owners across the world. Over the coming weeks Bea and Alex constantly e-mail each other. When Wyatt and his wife decided to spend Christmas in Bali. Bea decided to take her granddaughter Flora on their own dream trip to Edinburgh.

This was a delightful listen, Amanda writes beautifully. I love the descriptions of snowy Edinburgh and made me want to visit. I liked Bea who was kind and thoughtful to everyone. The backstory of Bea`s parents made me so sad, they didn't deserve their lovely daughter. It was heart warming to read how Bea and Flora grew closer during their trip.

The Christmas Cafe was poignant at times, but I wanted Bea to find happiness again. If you are new to Amanda Prowse I highly recommend you give one of her books a try.

Profile Image for Olga Kowalska (WielkiBuk).
1,694 reviews2,907 followers
December 14, 2016
A classic Christmas tale - charming, sweet and warm!
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Po „Świąteczną kafejkę” Amandy Prowse powinni sięgnąć czytelnicy spragnieni uroczych, pełnych nadziei współczesnych opowieści obyczajowych wypełnionych po brzegi bożonarodzeniową atmosferą, przedświątecznym ciepłem i tym wszystkim, co tworzy klimat prawdziwych Świąt, nie tylko komercyjną, pozorną wydmuszkę.
Profile Image for Fern Adams.
875 reviews63 followers
April 10, 2021
Read for the Popsugar 2021 reading challenge for the prompt of set in a restaurant.

Bea’s husband has just died. She’s running a cafe in Sydney while trying to overcome her grief. The time makes her reflect on the past and the choices and situations she has found herself in. Her granddaughter is getting in trouble at school and so spends more time with Bea and the two end up on an adventure that ties up decades old loose ends, a trip round the world and a bit of Christmas magic thrown in too.

Not really my cup of tea in genre but I thought I would give it a go. It was quite twee and overly descriptive at times however I enjoyed it a lot more than I had expected. A charming and heart warming tale!

(Also extra points for the narrator of the audiobook who really made the story come to life).
Profile Image for Margaret Madden.
755 reviews173 followers
December 31, 2015
4.5 stars.
Most book reviewers receive their Christmas themed books at the end of the summer, and have them read and reviewed by September or October. I have to admit that I cannot do this. I can't read a Christmas novel while wearing a bikini, or when there is no fire in the grate. I need dark evenings, cozy jumpers and a variety of Christmas decorations around me. Hence, this is only my forth Christmas read this season, However, it's a cracker (see what I did there)!

When Bea is widowed in her early fifties, she is feeling lost and lonely. Her son has his own family and has moved on. her cafe, in Sydney, Australia, is her world and yet she still feels something is missing. Her memories come back to her and she dreams of her younger days with a heavy heart. When she is invitedd to join an online club for cafe owners worldwide, she learns how to use her laptop properly and finds some virtual friends. Her granddaughter, Flora comes for a visit and soon the girls are planning a visit to the other side of the world, where snow replaces sand and Christmas decorations don't look out of place. Scotland bites them with its chill, but embraces them with its charm. When they arrive at the Christmas Cafe, they step into a unknown scenario which may just change their lives forever...

This is my first time reading Amanda Prowse, yet I have many more of her titles on my bookshelves. The cover was calling to me, in all its twinkling glory and the fact that the author is compared to JoJo Moyes and Freya North could only be a good thing, right? The first few pages were tear-jerkers. Bea's husband is dying and her relationship with her son is taut. Having a child at a young age, as a single mum, can be a blessing in the early years as you have the energy and fitness levels to keep up with them, but it can also have its downsides. Bea feels like her son resents her, yet can't figure out why. \her daughter-in-law is standoffish and she rarely sees her granddaughter. She even has to invite herself over for Christmas dinner each year. Something's not right. When Flora gets in trouble at school, a trip to her grandmother's house seems the logical way of allowing some cooling time between herself and her parents. Here is where Flora and Bea get to really know each other and even learn a lot about themselves in the process. Edinburgh is described with tenderness, from the tartan carpets of the Balmoral Hotel, to the historical castle and King Arthur's Seat right down to the narrow side streets of the city, steeped in atmosphere. This is a huge culture shock for the two girls, who are used to flip flops, and year-long sunshine. However, the biggest shock is yet to come. The Christmas Cafe's owner, has a surprise and Bea never saw it coming...

This was my favourite Christmas read for a long time. Having it based on two continents adds a little something extra and the emotional scenes had my heart giving a little flutter (corny, but true). Bea is a great character, although I would be surprised that someone in their early 50s wouldn't know how to send an email or even know how to use a smart phone. 50s is the new 30s, don't you know! One of my favourite scenes is where the two girls are descending the aircraft steps, after landing in Edinburgh. While Bea has experienced Europes colder climate before, Flora is flabbergasted, as only an Australian could be :)

"..this was the kind of cold that shrank your goosepimpled skin against your limbs and chilled your bones until they felt brittle. The kind of cold that hurt your ears and made you want to crawl beneath a big fat duvet and not emerge until the summer showed its face."

Even though Christmas is approaching its end, there are still many dark nights to be had, sitting by the fire and losing yourself in a good book. You could do a lot worse than this festive novel. Charming, with great character, it blends grief with hope and shows how sometimes life does only begin in the later parts of our lives. I'm off to root out Amanda Prowse's other novels...

Perfect for fans of Emma Hannigan and Cecelia Ahern.
Profile Image for Rachel Gilbey.
3,324 reviews571 followers
October 24, 2015
4.5 Stars

The Christmas Cafe is a beautiful love story, of lost true love. I found it got off to a slightly slow start, possibly due to Bea's husband dieing, and the initial grief, but once it moved on a bit, I was entranced by the story, and just wanted to read more and more.

One year later, Bea runs a cafe in Surry Hills, Sydney and puts all of herself into her work, after her husband Peter dies. Out of the blue she gets an approach from The Christmas Cafe in Edinburgh, suggesting she become part of a group of cafe owners all over the world, to share business tips.

She starts emailing the owner of the The Christmas Cafe back and forth, and develops a e-pen friend. At the same time, her son Wyatt, is having trouble with his daughter Flora. Flora is 13 and is a slightly troubled teen, who has fallen in with not the best crowd at school. Flora is determined to stay with Bea.

On a whim, Bea and Flora decide to go to Edinburgh for the two weeks before Christmas, her Wyatt and his wife are off to Bali anyway. It is the full introduction of Flora into the story, and then the initial reactions of them in Edinburgh, Scotland that really made me fall a bit in love with this book.

The descriptions of an Australian teenager experiencing a cold Scottish winter for the first time, complete with snow, and seeing it through her eyes was magical.

There was another story going on throughout the book, which started off as a slow burner, Bea's memories, every now and then flaring up, and then as they get to Scotland, this becomes the main storyline and its a heart warmer.

As always Amanda Prowse has written an enchanting story, that you never want to put down and that leaves you feeling quite emotional. This is not a Christmas book in the sense, that its going to be a light hearted, jolly look at the time of year, as it has a lot more depth to it. That being said there are some very funny scenes, and it is not heavy going either.

The Christmas Cafe has just the right amount of substance to it, to make it an enjoyable holiday read.
Profile Image for Lisencja.
46 reviews
December 3, 2024
Mega pozytywne zaskoczenie. 🥺 Idealna książka do przeczytania w grudniu.
Profile Image for lillian horton.
104 reviews8 followers
December 22, 2020
^ it’s a cutie. great for the seasonal feelings. not nearly as clichee as i was anticipating so that was very welcome.
Profile Image for Sue.
Author 1 book40 followers
January 9, 2016
Bea is a lively women in her early 50s, who is widowed at the start of the book. After the prologue, we meet her a year later in her everyday life in Australia. She’s the owner of a small restaurant, who adores her teenage granddaughter Flora but hardly ever sees her...

Most of the book is about learning to accept one’s past, and to take steps towards finding truth, even if this seems difficult or risky. The writing is good, with a nice amount of description and believable dialogue. While I had easily guessed one of the slight twists in the story, others were unexpected and cleverly done. The ending is perhaps a bit too neat and tidy, but I like books with encouraging, positive endings.

While viewpoints switch sometimes, and Flora is a pleasant and well-developed character, Bea is the main one. As a woman of similar age, I found myself empathising with her throughout, even though she is very different fromme. I’m glad that there’s a growing trend for lively fiction about middle-aged women, and this was an ideal book to read at bedtime during a busy period.

Recommended for anyone who likes mostly uplifting and thoughtful women's fiction with characters who are mostly well beyond their youth.
Profile Image for Nats.
101 reviews56 followers
October 21, 2015
It did take me a few chapters to get into his story but once I did I certainly was not disappointed. I read the second half of the book in one sitting because it was unputadownable and a page turner I just wanted to know how it ended.

The Book had amazing characters which held the story together perfectly. I especially warmed to Flora the teenager. I loved the unexpected twists the book took I did not see them coming

I enjoyed the trip to Edinburgh, Amanda’s descriptive wording of the city was just magical and reminded me of my trip there a few years ago. It also has made me really want to go back

I can certainly say you should be over the moon if you get The Christmas Cafe in your stocking this year its a heart warming inspiring story which you can curl up by the fire with a hot chocolate with. This is also a perfect gift to give a book lover this year.
Profile Image for Anne-Marie.
87 reviews4 followers
April 10, 2021
A pleasant read, a little slow to start. The characters were well written and easy toward to. The descriptions of a cold Scotland and the Christmas Cafe were lovely.
Bea is an easy character to like, although she has her own issues to correct, which come to light later in the story.
The ending was a little twee, but enjoyable non the less.
Profile Image for Julia Sarene.
1,676 reviews202 followers
December 23, 2017
This was a nice change from the other Christmas chicklit I've read, as the main protagonist is already a grandma (albeit a young one) and her granddaughter is also a main character. Those two POVs worked well for me.
I like how it is both about the past and the present, how one influences the other.

As so often it all was just that little bit TOO easy after such a long time, and the characters too good. But it was a nice read and I enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Matthew Roberts.
94 reviews1 follower
December 13, 2021
This was really poor. The writing was fairly bad but the characters even worse. The main character is supposed to be lacking in a little confidence but every other page shes recounting how cool she dresses or how beautiful she looks. This gets really irritating. None of the characters are realistic and the writing is clunky, I had to go back and read some bits multiple times as they were so poorly explained. One key part made no sense at all no matter how many times I read it. I doubt this is because it is a highbrow book with some deeply concealed secret about Alexs childhood. Its just poor.
Profile Image for Ritu Bhathal.
Author 6 books154 followers
February 9, 2019
Yet another wonderful book by Amanda Prowse.
A heartwrenching story of Bea, recently widowed, and dealing with her wayward granddaughter.
Its a learning curve of a story, where both grandma and gran daughter learn a lot about themselves.
Letting love find you, finding first loves and a trip from Oz to Scotland.
A truly lovely read and a bonus when I read of some old favourite characters too!
Profile Image for Susan.
396 reviews22 followers
December 7, 2015
The Christmas Cafe is not your usual seasonal read in that the book starts off in a hospital ward devoid of festive cheer. We meet Bea just as her husband Peter is close to death. Bea’s loss has left a big hole in her life, especially as she barely sees her son, Wyatt, and his family. Through the pages we find out that as much as Bea loved Peter she was not in love with him, but he had come along in her life just as she needed someone to lean on. Now that he has died she says sorry to him every day in her head as her thoughts are now drawn towards the one that got away – Wyatt’s father.

Bea has faced a lot of adversity throughout her life and I really felt for her. In her younger days it was her and Wyatt against the world but nowadays she is very much on the periphery of his life. However, one day her granddaughter lands on her doorstep and Bea feels needed after all. Amanda Prowse always manages to create realistic female characters that resonate with the reader. The chapters of Bea’s life include lost love, single parenthood and family drama, but Peter’s death – rather than signalling the end of her story – is actually just the beginning. The letter from a cafe across the miles arrives at just the right time and Bea embarks on an emotional journey, which takes her from Sydney all the way to Edinburgh. I am familiar with both cities and Amanda captures them both perfectly. I especially loved the intricately described Edinburgh cafe – the smell of cock-a-leekie soup practically wafted from the pages. The settings chosen are so accurately detailed that I half expect to come across The Christmas Cafe next time I am in Edinburgh!

Instead of being heavily laden with Christmas schmaltz, Amanda has applied a delicate touch. The main essence of this book is a heartwarming love story with a light dusting of snow.
Profile Image for Edel Waugh Salisbury.
652 reviews
October 17, 2015
This was probably one of the loveliest Christmas books I have ever read . The story is about a woman called Bea who owns a cafe , and through that on an online forum for cafe owners worldwide she meets another cafe owner on the other side of the world and they begin a friendship . The story is based in Auatralia and Scotland and was lovely expieriencing the story from both settings .
This story is about family, love and timing , and how important all these things are especially at Christmas. I closed this book with a smile on my face and a warm feeling in my belly and I would recommend this to anyone who needs a book to get them in the mood for Chritsmas and leave them with a feeling of hope.

I received this book for review from the lovely people over at Lovereading.co.uk.
Profile Image for Nicole Carey.
363 reviews4 followers
October 31, 2015
I won this book in a Goodreads giveaway and was so excited as I never usually win anything. We follow the story of Bea and what happens after her husband Peter dies. It took me a few chapter to get in to the book but once I did I raced through it reading the last half of the book in one evening. There are lots of other interesting characters in the book who made me smile. All in all a fabulous book Amanda Prowse always delivers a good story.
Profile Image for Heather.
574 reviews3 followers
February 20, 2019
I really enjoy Amanda Prowse, I loved this book - it is one to pick up on a dull afternoon, settle into a sofa with a warm drink and lose yourself in. I found myself wanting to be the main character, enjoying the ups and downs of her life. I'm not a big romance reader, but this was 'delicate' and not overly mushy.
A great Sunday read :)
19 reviews1 follower
August 16, 2016
Another fantastic book from Amanda Prowse.
Profile Image for Emma Crowley.
1,026 reviews156 followers
October 29, 2015
The Christmas Café is the fourth book from Amanda Prowse this year and I'm still left wondering where on earth does she find the time to write so much? To write so many books and never lose any substance or depth to her stories is quite an achievement. Having read all her releases this year she is now firmly one of my favourite authors, one of those whom you eagerly await news of each new story to come. You are always guaranteed an emotional read from Amanda as she brings relevant, everyday topics to the forefront of our minds that other authors may be afraid to tackle.

The Christmas Café is the latest in the No Greater Love series (the three books released already this year come from the No Greater Courage Series) and it has the most beautiful cover that instantly catches your eye and arouses your curiosity and makes you question just why is that girl going into the café with a suitcase and just what kind of story does she have to tell? As a reader you can almost imagine yourself doing your Christmas shopping and needing a breather and stopping off in The Christmas Café to relax and unwind and watch the crowds pass you by as you sit in the window. I think a Christmas Café should be compulsory in every town and city in the weeks leading up to the festive period.

The book opens as Bea Greenstock is saying goodbye to her husband of over 30 years, Peter. His time has come and although she loved him dearly and she will miss him, there is still a deeply hidden longing in her heart for the one she let get away. Well on further reading it seemed she had no choice in this matter. Bea lives in Sydney, Australia and is still only 53 she has to continue on with her life as she has a son Wyatt and grand daughter Flora although her relationship with Wyatt is not always on the best of terms. The past always seems to be haunting them, things left unsaid that really should be out in the open.

Bea also has her café to run 'The Reservoir Café' which she set up to make people feel like they have a place and family and friends even if they had no one. Bea can't let her staff members Kim and Tait down they, like her customers, rely on the supportive atmosphere the café offers. If Bea were just to give up what would happen? This quote sums up how Bea feels 'Her loss and exhaustion sweeping over her like a wave that left her gulping for air'. I sensed early on that there was a lot more to Bea than first meets the eye, that she had a past that was still very firmly affecting her present and future. Yes she did love Peter but was he a stop gap and a way of bettering her young son's life at a time when she needed every ounce of support she could get both financially and emotionally. One thing I couldn't get over was how young Bea was in the story, she obviously had had Wyatt at a very young age but seeing her referred to as a grandmother by Flora made her seem older at times and I did have to remind myself she really did have an awful lot more living and enjoying of life to do. But what will get her out of her slump and renew bonds that have been left to fray and splinter?

Bea undoubtedly misses Peter and wants to turn and tell him things but yet the guilt is beginning to creep in that maybe her heart had belonged to someone else. She feels vulnerable and lonely but her granddaughter Flora may just be about to take her mind off everything. It was evident for anyone to see that Flora was going through a really tough time, both with her parents and school. Staying with Bea enables her to get away from the situation and have time to think. Tensions and arguments are not doing anything to help the situation and Flora needs her own space to see where things are going wrong. Flora was simply just lost and on the cusp of becoming a teenager and entering womanhood yet still underneath it all a vulnerable young girl who really wanted a shoulder to cry on and support to be given when needed and maybe just that little bit of responsibility taken off her shoulders as she wasn't ready for it. Bea was so supportive to Flora, never telling her what to do or offering her own opinion. Instead through her actions and counsel she slowly leads Flora to make her own decision and to realise she may not have things so bad after all. Bea's own relationship with her son was not that great and as the story unfolds we learn why. Wyatt came across as spoilt, ungrateful and non compassionate. He didn't seem to care his mother was hurting and maybe there was something else eating away at her underneath. I can't say I liked Wyatt at all even in the end his arrogance just didn't endear him to me in the slightest.

So what of The Christmas Café as suggested in the title? Well Bea receives a letter from an Alex McKay living in Edinburgh and running the Christmas Café. Alex has set up an online forum for café owners all over the world to interact and share their stories. Soon with a little help from Flora (who really did grow on me as I saw her transformation begin) Alex and Bea are emailing back and forth with Bea pouring out her innermost feelings to a stranger but it all feels so natural like it was meant to be. Surely Bea will therefore never be embarrassed at some of her deepest confessions being out in the open. Soon Bea and Flora find themselves on their way to Scotland and a trip which will change the course of their lives forever. I'm not going to say much more as here the story really did take off and an awful lot happened. Bea's past does come back to meet her and I loved how it all panned out. I got that moment I was longing for and really Amanda had me fooled right until the reveal moment. I just love to be kept guessing and I think most readers will not uncover the truth, it's original and cleverly done and couldn't have happened any other way. Bea and Flora's adventure in the snowy city of Edinburgh was a life changer but ultimately in a good way. I think what follows really sums up the heart and soul of this book and is a philosophy we should all live by in our own lives 'How do you know when you've met the love of your life? That's a good question' Bea smiled. I suppose the answer is that you just have to trust your little voice of instinct'.

The Christmas Café is very different from Amanda's previous releases this year. It's not as hard hitting, yes there is emotion but not in the gut wrenching way I experienced in say A Mother's Story or Three and a Half Heartbeats but really there is actually nothing wrong with this at all. After the emotional, heart breaking journey Amanda has taken us over the last few of her books I felt I wanted and needed something lighter yet something that had a lovely message full of hope and strength at its centre and that is what I got with this book. This may sound so clichéd but this really was a heart-warming, enchanting book. Yes the first half was slow to get going but once Flora and Bea head to Edinburgh things really picked up and the magic started to happen. I was there with them as they wandered through and explored the city streets on a cold, dark winters day lost in the sights, sounds, smells and memories of Christmas. I was waiting and waiting for that jaw dropping moment that Amanda usually provides and for once I sadly thought I wasn’t going to get it but then out of nowhere Amanda did it again and I had not seen it coming so cleverly was it done. It made the book even more enjoyable to see such a twist and to prove love and romance will win out over everything else each and every time. This book is a true, genuine romantic story extremely well told with a clear beginning, middle and end and I adored both the story and characters.

The Christmas Café is the perfect read for the festive season. If you were to wake up on Christmas morning with this delight wrapped up in nice shining paper and a sparkly bow around it trust me you wouldn't be disappointed. My only question remains will Amanda's next release be from the No Greater Love or No Greater Courage series or does she plan to take her readers in a whole new direction. I'll guess we'll have to hang in there until 2016 to find out.
Profile Image for Lillian.
82 reviews7 followers
October 17, 2022
On impulse, I bought this book through Amazon. I needed a quick fix to my restlessness, and a sweet story never fails.
I don't want to get in too deep about the story because, as a short novel, it would be easy to give away the twist quickly.
The marine character, Bea, is 53 yrs old and a recent widow. Unlike other stories I've read of Amanda Prowse, whose characters are dealing with grief, this one doesn't focus as much on grief as it makes her "secret" love (although there's not much secret IMO, as her deceased husband knew of her love for another). She is a likable character, and I appreciate her relationship with her granddaughter, Flora, who is having teenage struggles. I think Prowse does a better job with the development of the granddaughter's personality and story than she does with the main character.
Because the author provides a relationship resolution with her daughter-in-law, it seems she could have developed that character a little more. Otherwise, that relationship seemed more like a filler.
There were two things I found peculiar. The book cover was much like the one for "A Little Love," and I found no significance. She indeed doesn't walk into the cafe carrying a suitcase. Also, there were several references to Bea and being old at 53, with a couple of references to a pudgy tummy, wrinkled neckline, and flowing gray hair. I began to envision a woman more of the age of sixties. However, I looked at the copyright, and in 2014 we judged fifty-year-old women as old and done, so I guess it fits. Fortunately, that's not so much the case these days.
Overall, this book is a nice read. The characters' problems are nicely gift-wrapped and won't spoil the enjoyment of a late afternoon tea, but save your money and get it from the library or used bookstore.
Profile Image for Maddy.
653 reviews24 followers
October 22, 2019
Bea loved her husband Peter very much, and was devastated when he died, however there was always the underlying feeling of guilt that he wasn't the love of her life. When Bea met Peter she had already loved, and lost, and had a son by her lover. Peter took on her and her son, and cared for them both.


After Peter died Bea was stuck in a bit of a rut. Her Granddaughter Flora was playing up and staying with her to give some distance between her and some undesirable friends (and her and her parents!), and Flora was helping her run The Reservoir Street Kitchen in Sydney Australia.


One day, Bea gets a message from the owner of the faraway Christmas Café in Edinburgh, Scotland inviting her to join a forum for café owners. Her Granddaughter shows her how to reply, and Bea and Alex become e-penfriends. From this, an idea is born, and Bea and Flora plan a Christmas trip to Edinburgh to see the snow and visit the Christmas Café.


Throw in problems between Flora and her parents, between Bea and her beloved son Wyatt and his wife, and between Bea and her parents and sister, caused by her early pregnancy, and the fact that Bea is still pining for her lost love -Wyatt's father, and you have a fabulous book full of emotion and easily up to the high standard we expect from Amanda Prowse. Definitely one to read, especially at Christmas.
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