Chick Lit Reviews
  • Home
  • About/Contact
  • American Saturdays
  • Author Articles
  • Author Interviews
  • Author Profiles
  • Book Awards
  • Book News
  • Book Reviews
  • Chick Flick Tuesday
  • Chick Lit Classics
  • Cover Stories
  • Giveaways
  • Industry Interviews
  • Release Dates

    LBD Week!

    Contact Us


    Email: [email protected]
    (Review Policy)
    Newsletter Sign-up

    Subscribe Via Email

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

    Favourite Books:

    Author Websites

    • Abby McDonald
    • Alison Kervin
    • Amanda Addison
    • Anna McPartlin
    • Belinda Jones
    • Carole Matthews
    • Catherine Alliott
    • Cathy Kelly
    • Cecelia Ahern
    • Chris Manby
    • Claire Allan
    • Clare Dowling
    • Clodagh Murphy
    • Debbie Carbin
    • Debby Holt
    • Dorothy Koomson
    • Ellie Campbell
    • Emily Barr
    • Emily Giffin
    • Emma Burstall
    • Emma Hannigan
    • Emma Heatherington
    • Fiona Cassidy
    • Fiona Gibson
    • Gemma Burgess
    • Gil McNeil
    • Giselle Green
    • Harriet Evans
    • Harriet Evans
    • Ilana Fox
    • Isabel Wolff
    • Jane Costello
    • Jane Green
    • Jane Moore
    • Jenny Colgan
    • Jenny Gardiner
    • Jessica Brody
    • Jill Mansell
    • Jo Carnegie
    • Jo Rees
    • Judy Astley
    • Julie Highmore
    • Kate Harrison
    • Kate Jacobs
    • Kate Long
    • Katie Fforde
    • Linda Green
    • Linda Green
    • Lisa Heidke
    • Lisa Jewell
    • Louise Bagshawe
    • Louise Candlish
    • Louise Douglas
    • Lucy Dawson
    • Maggie Alderson
    • Maggie Dana
    • Mandy Baggot
    • Marian Keyes
    • Martel Maxwell
    • Matt Dunn
    • Meg Cabot
    • Melissa Hill
    • Michelle Jackson
    • Milly Johnson
    • Miranda Dickinson
    • Niamh Greene
    • Nina Bell
    • Olivia Darling
    • Rebecca Chance
    • Rebecca Farnworth
    • Rowan Coleman
    • Ruth Saberton
    • Sam Baker
    • Sarah Duncan
    • Sasha Wagstaff
    • Shari Low
    • Sinead Moriarty
    • Sophie King
    • Sophie Kinsella
    • Susy McPhee
    • Tara Hyland
    • Tilly Bagshawe
    • Trisha Ashley
    • Veronica Henry
    • Victoria Connelly
    • Wendy Holden

    We’re Reviewing:

    Archives

    • November 2010
    • October 2010
    • September 2010
    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009
    • May 2009
    • April 2009
    • March 2009

     

    October 2010
    M T W T F S S
    « Sep   Nov »
     123
    45678910
    11121314151617
    18192021222324
    25262728293031

    Statcounter

    Since November 2009

    Book Review: A Season to Remember by Sheila O’Flanagan

    October 15th, 2010 by Chloe

    Claire and Neil Archer love running the Sugar Loaf Lodge Hotel in Ireland. It’s always been Claire’s dream to have a hotel, and there is definitely something special about the Sugar Loaf Lodge that keeps people coming back time and time again. However, the financial crisis has hit the hotel hard, and Neil and Claire are worried about filling the rooms up. When Christmas comes around though, it seems people still want to go away as the rooms magically begin to fill, and Claire feels like a special festive season is upon them all. Join the Christmas residents of the Sugar Loaf Lodge hotel for one special Christmas season, and find out what brings each of them to the hotel at Christmas time.

    It has been a while since I read one of Sheila’s books, so when I was sent this gorgeous festive themed read, I couldn’t help but tuck in straight away. The cover looks beautiful in the image to the left, but it is so much more beautiful in real life, with a sparkly heart on the front, and is certainly a book you’d be proud to be seen reading! The book is actually a sort of short story collection rather than one big novel, which actually suits the book because you can dip in and out of it quite nicely, and I can certainly imagine it will be a great one to read on a cold winter evening in front of the fire! So I dove straight in hoping to love it, and luckily for me, Sheila didn’t let me down!

    The book begins introducing us to the hotel owners, Neil and Claire, and I thought we would be following them over the christmas period, but that turned out not to be the case. I really liked them as a couple, O’Flanagan writes them as a nice pair that begin the story with a real homely feel because they adore their hotel, and straight away I felt like I wanted the hotel to be okay, just because of them! Instead of following the hoteliers, we are instead treated to a room-by-room story about each of the guests, and the reason they came to be at the hotel at Christmas. This works really well because it allows for interactions between the guests to keep the story in the present but also allows us to go into the back story of these characters which really allows you to get absorbed into their stories.

    I don’t want to tell you too much about them because the beauty of this book is seeing the stories unravel as you read them, but I will tell you a bit about what’s inside. We meet a couple who seem to be having problems, but it isn’t at all clear to everyone else why they seem to not be speaking to each other during their stay. There is a group of older women who decide to spend Christmas together rather than be alone on Christmas day. There’s also a young couple who flee to the hotel with their baby to get away for their warring families, and a bit of a magical ghost story thrown in too. We get a visit from some characters from one of O’Flanagan’s previous books Anyone But Him which was great fun and it was nice to catch up with them and see what they are up to. A single man trying to get over the break up of his marriage also descends on Sugar Loaf Lodge and meets up with another single female resident, what will happen there? They are definitely a great bunch of characters, and ones that you will want to read about as the book progresses.

    I really enjoyed every single page of this book, and would highly recommend it, especially as a festive story! However, I can imagine enjoying this book at any time of year because while it is set at Christmas, it isn’t too focussed on that fact and that means you can pick this up and enjoy it whenever. I found O’Flanagan’s writing style was very warm and easy to read, and she makes each of the characters one you will care about. The way she weaves the stories together despite the fact they are all a bunch of strangers is fantastic as it draws the whole book together, and I really enjoyed the use of the alternating first and third person story telling devices. I think this is a wonderful short story collection, it captures the magic of Christmas, love and family perfectly, and is a really superb read. Definitely recommended!

    Thank you to the publishers for sending me a copy to review!

    Posted in 2010 releases, Book Reviews, Rating: 5/5 | 4 Comments »

    You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

    4 Responses to “Book Review: A Season to Remember by Sheila O’Flanagan”

    1. Kat says:
      October 15, 2025 at 2:46 pm

      This sounds good, Looking forward to reading it.

    2. Joan says:
      October 15, 2025 at 5:50 pm

      Looking forward to reading this ASAP!

    3. Lucy says:
      October 15, 2025 at 9:02 pm

      Another book I want to read during the festive period! I’m going to have to start now if I want to read them all.

    4. Caz says:
      October 16, 2025 at 4:29 pm

      This is sitting on my shelf waiting to be read!

    Leave a Reply

    Click here to cancel reply.

      Search

      Sponsors

      Readers Choice Award

      We’re Reading:

      Leah: Sinful Deceptions by Zoe Miller

      Chloe: Promises, Promises by Erica James
      Chloe's Books read in 2010

      Recent Reviews:































      Recent Posts

      • American Saturdays Book Reviews: Don’t Sing at the Table by Adriana Trigiani
      • American Saturdays Book News: The Long Road Home by Mary Alice Monroe
      • American Saturdays ‘Not Exactly Chick Lit But…’: Unbearable Lightness by Portia de Rossi
      • Book Review: Want To Know A Secret? by Sue Moorcroft
      • Chick Lit Classic: My Sister’s Keeper by Jodi Picoult

Valid CSS � 2009-2010 Chicklitreviews.com | Powered by WordPress | Theme by Leah Graham |