The Seven Sisters trilogy comes to a startling, unforgettable conclusion in Atlas: The Story of Pa Salt, a book that spans a lifetime of love and tragedy, traversing countries and oceans. 1928, Paris A family is generous enough to take in a youngster who was found on the verge of death. He thrives in his new home and is shown a life he never imagined was possible by the family. He is gentle, talented, and precocious. But he won''t say anything about his true self. He can almost forget the horrors of his past or the promise he has made as he matures into a young man, falling in love and enrolling in studies at the famed Conservatoire de Paris. But an evil is growing throughout Europe, making everyone''s safety uncertain.
He knows in his heart that the moment will come when he will have to run away once more. The Aegean in 2008 The seven sisters come together for the first time on the Titan to bid their mysterious father, whom they loved so tenderly, a final farewell. To everyone''s amazement, Pa Salt has opted to hand the key to their pasts to the lost sister. However, a new query arises for every truth that is revealed. The sisters are forced to deal with the realisation that their adored father was a man they hardly knew, and, more disturbingly, that these long-buried secrets might still have an impact on them now.
In this epic conclusion to the Seven Sisters series, everything will be revealed.
A masterclass in beautiful writing
The Sun on The Sun Sister
Delicious reading
Daily Mail on The Pearl Sister
Another epic tale of love, loss and discovery
My Weekly on The Pearl Sister
Published : 11 May 2023
784 pages
ISBN 9781529043525
Lucinda Riley
Lucinda Riley was born in 1965 in Ireland, and after an early career as an actress in film, theatre and television, wrote her first book aged twenty-four. Her books have been translated into thirty-seven languages and continue to strike an emotional chord with all cultures around the world. ‘The Seven Sisters’ series specifically has become a global phenomenon, creating its own genre, and there are plans to create a seven-season TV series.
Her books have been nominated for numerous awards, including the Italian Bancarella prize, The Lovely Books award in Germany, and the Romantic Novel of the Year award. In 2020 she received the Dutch Platinum award for sales over 300,000 copies for a single novel in one year – an award last won by J K Rowling for Harry Potter.
In collaboration with her son Harry Whittaker, she also devised and wrote a series of books for children called ‘The Guardian Angels’ series.
Though she brought up her four children mostly in Norfolk in England, in 2015 she fulfilled her dream of buying a remote farmhouse in West Cork, Ireland, which she always felt was her spiritual home, and indeed this was where her last five books were written.
Lucinda was diagnosed with cancer in 2017 and died on June 11th 2021, surrounded by her family.