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Heart and Soul

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER A story of patients and staff, family, and friends who are part of a heart clinic in a community caught between the old Ireland and the new. • "Good-hearted [and] entertaining." —The Washington Post

Dr. Clara Casey has been offered the thankless job of establishing the underfunded clinic and agrees to take it on for a year. She has plenty on her plate already—two difficult adult daughters and the unwanted attentions of her ex-husband—but she assembles a wonderfully diverse staff devoted to helping their demanding, often difficult patients.
Before long the clinic is established as an essential part of the community, and Clara must decide whether or not to leave a place where lives are saved, courage is rewarded, and humor and optimism triumph over greed and self-pity.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 22, 2008
      Binchy delivers another delightful Binchyesque amalgamation of intersecting lives, this time centering on Clara Casey, a cardiologist whose marriage and career have fallen apart. After she accepts an undesirable post at St. Brigid's Hospital, Clara throws herself into work to forget the humiliation of her husband's many affairs, but it's difficult to escape her home life with two adult daughters who still depend on her as if they were children. Though she stands at the center of the book, Clara cedes the stage to others, such as Declan Carroll, a young doctor at the clinic trying to make a life for himself, and Ania, Clara's assistant, whose affair with a married man forced her to leave her Polish hometown. Beautiful, hardworking and humble, Ania attracts the attention of Carl Walsh, the son of one of the clinic's patients. And so it goes in this novel of intersecting lives that keeps daily drama interesting even when it occasionally sacrifices suspense for realism. In spite of a few dull moments, the collective, charming effect of these story lines suggests that individuals are more connected than they might think.

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2009
      A Dublin heart clinic, full of romantic and family crises in need of healing, provides the apt setting for Binchy 's latest (Whitethorn Woods, 2007, etc.).

      St. Brigid 's Hospital opens a cardiac clinic over the fiscal objections of administrator Frank Ennis. Directing the clinic isn 't the big job Dr. Clara Casey wanted, and her mood isn 't improved when long-estranged husband Alan turns up to say his girlfriend is pregnant and he wants a divorce. But soon Clara is enthusiastically involved in redecorating and hiring a crack staff, whose lives intertwine with those of the clinic 's patients in the familiar Binchy landscape of overlapping stories. Young Dr. Declan and Nurse Fiona fall in love. Impoverished but multitalented aide Ania falls for Carl, whose father is an elderly patient. Ania also helps physical therapist Johnny 's friend Father Flynn avoid an unmerited scandal; Binchy fans will enjoy the cameo appearances by this benevolent priest and numerous other characters from earlier books. Clara finally begins divorce proceedings against Alan and becomes romantically involved with a goodhearted, penny-pinching pharmacist. Clara 's assistant Hilary, who can 't bear to put a beloved but failing parent into a home, blames herself when her mother wanders off and is hit by a car. At the clinic 's big fundraiser, Clara and still-shaky Hilary plot to match Clara 's aimless daughter with Hilary 's musician son. Meanwhile, Carl 's snobbish mother attempts to drive a wedge between him and Ania, but he stands up to her. Declan 's engagement to Fiona is tested when Fiona gets cold feet, but Declan 's patience is rewarded. By the time we get to their wedding at Father Flynn 's social center for immigrants, most of the singles have happily coupled off. Even Clara and her archenemy Frank dance the night away. Part of the fun is guessing who will show up in the next book.

      Binchy has her formula down pat, and only a curmudgeon could resist this master of cheerful, read-by-the-fire comfort.

      (COPYRIGHT (2009) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2009
      The newly hired director of a cardiac-care center, Dr. Clara Casey is a strong character, who with great humor and panache manages life as a female medical professional and the single mother of two daughters. Crossing paths in the clinic or via clinic staff are Nora and Aidan Dunne, Father Bryan Flynn, Tom and Cathy Feather, and twins Simon and Maud, among others from various earlier Binchy novels (e.g., "Evening Class"). In keeping with tradition, several important dinners take place at Quentins restaurant. A nurse in Clara's clinic, Fiona Ryan has rebounded from the disastrous relationship portrayed in "Nights of Rain and Stars", and a hard-working Polish immigrant named Ania overcomes her past and blossoms in her adopted country. The novel ranges far and wide, following some recurring characters to Greece, and it is always a comfort to catch up with familiar faces and meet new friends. Binchy fills the book with people finding true love, discovering their niche in life, and taking full advantage of second chances. Binchy's numerous fans will seek this out. [See Prepub Alert, "LJ" 10/1/08.]Beth Lindsay, Washington State Univ. Libs., Pullman

      Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2008
      ADublin hospital cardiac care center forms the figurative heart, and forges the symbolic soul, of Binchys latest tour de force celebration of the simple blessings of a community whose joyousbonds are often eclipsed by theeccentricities of family and the improbable volatility of love. When Dr. Clara Casey becomes manager of thecontroversial and woefully unsupported outpatientclinic, she swiftly assembles a motley supporting staff of charismatic doctors, compassionate nurses, capable therapists, and clever assistants whose personal affairs of the heart are frequently more compelling and occasionally more cataclysmic than the physical infirmities presented by the actual patients. Whether it is a valiant young Polish girl on the lam from a ruinous love affair or a bumbling parish priest being pursued by a devious con artist, no oneleast of all Clara herselfis immune from getting caught up in one of the daily mini-dramas thatassail this dedicated group. Interweaving the domestic narratives of a dissimilar collection of individuals isbeloved Binchys stock-in-trade, and once again, she does so with sublime ease, inventively engaging readers through a reassuring and persuasive combination of gracious warmth, gentle humor, and genuine affection.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2009
      A Dublin heart clinic, full of romantic and family crises in need of healing, provides the apt setting for Binchy's latest (Whitethorn Woods, 2007, etc.).

      St. Brigid's Hospital opens a cardiac clinic over the fiscal objections of administrator Frank Ennis. Directing the clinic isn't the big job Dr. Clara Casey wanted, and her mood isn't improved when long-estranged husband Alan turns up to say his girlfriend is pregnant and he wants a divorce. But soon Clara is enthusiastically involved in redecorating and hiring a crack staff, whose lives intertwine with those of the clinic's patients in the familiar Binchy landscape of overlapping stories. Young Dr. Declan and Nurse Fiona fall in love. Impoverished but multitalented aide Ania falls for Carl, whose father is an elderly patient. Ania also helps physical therapist Johnny's friend Father Flynn avoid an unmerited scandal; Binchy fans will enjoy the cameo appearances by this benevolent priest and numerous other characters from earlier books. Clara finally begins divorce proceedings against Alan and becomes romantically involved with a goodhearted, penny-pinching pharmacist. Clara's assistant Hilary, who can't bear to put a beloved but failing parent into a home, blames herself when her mother wanders off and is hit by a car. At the clinic's big fundraiser, Clara and still-shaky Hilary plot to match Clara's aimless daughter with Hilary's musician son. Meanwhile, Carl's snobbish mother attempts to drive a wedge between him and Ania, but he stands up to her. Declan's engagement to Fiona is tested when Fiona gets cold feet, but Declan's patience is rewarded. By the time we get to their wedding at Father Flynn's social center for immigrants, most of the singles have happily coupled off. Even Clara and her archenemy Frank dance the night away. Part of the fun is guessing who will show up in the next book.

      Binchy has her formula down pat, and only a curmudgeon could resist this master of cheerful, read-by-the-fire comfort.

      (COPYRIGHT (2009) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

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