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Pauline McLynn

    July 11, 1962

    Pauline McLynn is an Irish author whose works are characterized by keen observation and a witty perspective on human relationships. Through her stories, she often explores the complexities of everyday life with a gentle humor and a deep understanding of her characters. Her style is accessible yet insightful, offering readers an engaging and often moving experience. McLynn masterfully captures the nuances of Irish culture, translating them onto the pages of her books, which resonate with readers worldwide.

    Summer in the City
    The Woman on the Bus
    Right on time
    Something for the Weekend (Leo Street, Book 1)
    Better than a rest
    Missing You Already
    • 2009

      Missing You Already

      • 384 pages
      • 14 hours of reading
      3.7(23)Add rating

      MISSING YOU ALREADY is Pauline McLynn at her storytelling best. She creates an utterly enchanting novel about the importance of the little things in life - little things that we so often take for granted but would be lost without...

      Missing You Already
    • 2008

      An Irish Times bestseller, Bright Lights and Promises is a mesmerising novel that deals with family relationships in touching detail.

      Bright Lights and Promises
    • 2006

      Summer in the City

      • 384 pages
      • 14 hours of reading
      3.6(131)Add rating

      Pauline McLynn tells the moving story of two women who hardly know each other. One has literally been turfed out on to the street following a divorce from her husband; the other is battling to overcome a tragic loss in her family. What brings them together is nothing more than geography.

      Summer in the City
    • 2005

      The Woman on the Bus

      • 416 pages
      • 15 hours of reading
      3.6(306)Add rating

      It's a typical Tuesday evening in Kilbrody. Cathy Long is on her way to collect her drunken father from the pub. Ozzy O'Reilly is in the graveyard, watching the Dublin bus through his binoculars. Charlie Finn is pulling pints, when suddenly it hits he's bored. And that's when the woman from the bus walks through his door and drinks herself into oblivion. Now the whole village wants to know, who is the woman on the bus? The question is, will she tell them?

      The Woman on the Bus
    • 2002

      Right on time

      • 343 pages
      • 13 hours of reading
      3.6(102)Add rating

      Every second counts for private investigator Leo Street on her latest case. She must find a missing teenager in the drug-fuelled streets of Dublin before it's too late. But with a watch that's stopped and a biological clock that's taken over, it's not going to be easy. Leo's irrepressible sidekick Ciara, her mischievous mutt No. 4, and Ciara's gorgeous twin brother Ronan, lend a helping hand. But can they track down the missing girl and save the day, or will a case of bad timing put all their lives at risk?

      Right on time
    • 2001

      Intrepid private eye Leo Street is on the trail of an adulterous husband when her clapped-out car causes her cover to be blown. It's time to draft in Ciara Gillespie, the teenage tearaway whom she befriended on her last case. At first, Ciara's madcap methods of surveillance leave a lot to be desired, but soon she's unearthing the secret life of an obstetrician who likes to dabble in genetic engineering... Meanwhile, Leo finds herself in even deeper trouble when she answers the call of Andy Raynor - an old flame who she's never fully extinguished. Sometimes a change isn't necessarily better than a rest...

      Better than a rest
    • 2000

      Pauline McLynn, who shot to fame playing Mrs Doyle in Father Ted, introduces us to an irresistible female private investigator, Leo Street, in her first crime caper. 'A breezy, humorous debut...fast-moving, entertaining' Sunday Tribune schovat popis

      Something for the Weekend (Leo Street, Book 1)