Surely there's nothing wrong with a tin of pilchards that are 27 years out of date....?!
Fiona's books are funny, you can usually hear me giggling away to myself somewhere when I'm reading one, and The Full Nest was very definitely witty, with loveable characters, from Carly's eccentric Dad who's addicted to game shows, to Eddie - Carly and Frank's eldest child who finds himself having to grow up superfast.
I wanted to slap Frank around a bit for acting like papa bear and retreating to his cave when the going got tough, but on the other hand, he just needed a big hug to show him that everything will work out when you all stick together.
I didn't manage to have kids of my own and when my stepdaughter's kids stay, I love them being with me, but it's so lovely when they go home!!!
If you're in the mood for an easy-read, that'll have you laughing out loud, then grab yourself a copy of Fiona's new book, you won't be disappointed.
Thank you to NetGalley and Avon Books UK for the opportunity to read and review The Full Nest by Fiona Gibson.
About the Book
One family home. Three generations. What could possibly go wrong?
Carly loves her family. She really does. It’s just that now her three children are grown up, she thought it was her time.
Everyone talks about the empty nest and how difficult that can be, but Carly and her husband, Frank, have often fantasised about it – meals without arguments, conversation without shouting over the sound of the Xbox, holidays planned around the culture not the kids’ club.
But Carly’s nest is far from empty. Her elderly dad needs more support and is moving in ‘temporarily’. On top of which, Carly’s son, Eddie, is far too comfortable at home – why go out and get a job, when your parents keep you fed and your clothes laundered? And just when Carly is starting to pull her hair out, Eddie drops a bombshell that changes everything.
Is there room in the nest for one more?
As a self-confessed magazine addict, Fiona started working on teen bible Jackie in Dundee at the age of 17. Originally from a West Yorkshire village called Goose Eye, she spent her twenties as a magazine journalist in London and moved to a crumbling old house in the South Lanarkshire countryside when her twin sons were toddlers.
When her boys left for university, Fiona felt a craving for city life again. With her husband Jimmy and their daughter Erin, she now lives in a flat in Glasgow. She loves to draw, paint, cook and run – usually with her collie cross, Jack (just the running part).












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