BOOK REVIEW: Rachel's Holiday by Marian Keyes

41cum00kul_sl500_aa240_ Rachel's Holiday is consistently voted the favourite chick lit book by the authors we interview for Trashionista and yet - can you believe it? - we hadn't actually reviewed it. Until now...

Reviewed by Helen Redfern

Rachel is one fifth of the Walsh sisters, the middle fifth. She lives in New York with her fellow Irish friend, Brigit, partying hard, working little and going out with Luke Costello, a man who likes his leather trousers tight.

She’s living in a haze of Valium, cocaine and booze until one day she overdoses. Her father insists she return to Ireland and she’s booked into the Cloisters, a treatment centre, or as Helen her sister typically says, ‘That’s nothing but a loony bin by another name’. Rachel, naively, believes it will be full of celebs and saunas, so agrees to go, knowing full well when she gets out she’ll hotfoot it back to New York and take as many drugs as she can. We then follow her on her journey of ‘enlightenment’, shall we say, as she learns more about herself and the full consequences of her actions.

Rachel’s Holiday, along with Watermelon, is my favourite Marian Keyes book. I have to admit though I didn’t get it when I first read it some five years ago (it was published in 1997). I think I must have believed Rachel too much and couldn’t understand why she needed to be in the clinic. When I re-read it recently for the second time I got so much more from it. I understood Rachel, I read between the lines (it’s written in first person so you have to) and subsequently gained much more depth from it.

The flashbacks used are effective and you don’t feel you are inconveniently being dragged away from the main story. They are what makes the story as we start to see what Rachel’s life was really like in New York and not what she thought it was like.

Keyes’ book have been described in a recent newspaper article as “tales of loveable heroines struggling to find Mr Right”. If that’s what you are expecting from this book (or any of her books for that matter) you are in for a surprise (and maybe I was first time round which is why I didn’t get it). It is a dark subject of drugs and addiction but interspersed with humour, warmth and tight leather trousers. Fabulous.

Rating: 5/5

Like this? Try Anybody Out There? by Marian Keyes

BOOK REVIEW: Rachel's Holiday by Marian Keyes - Comments

  • blueseeker

    Gosh i so i agree with you when i first pick up the book the other side of the story which i found at the airport on my way to Greece, i really though oh another chic read but now that i have read all of the other books i understand how intense the stories actually are. Although i thought this book was a bit dark when a read it a few years ago, it was not until i finished anybody out there that i really got the meaning of it. I guess if i had to pick a favorite it will have to be this series since it&#39s about all the sisters and i cannot wait for the next one.

  • Sara

    My favorite Marian Keyes book is "Anybody Out There?". I&#39ve read it twice and look forwards to reading it a third, maybe even a fourth time! You all have inspired me to read "Rachel&#39s Holiday", which is ironic because I&#39ve just finished a book a need a new one! :)

  • My absolute favorite Marian Keyes book is Sushi For Beginners, but I&#39ve loved all of them. The woman is simply divine!

  • Robin

    Marian Keyes&#39 books are all so much more than “tales of loveable heroines struggling to find Mr Right”. Watermelon, one of the first chick lit books I ever read, is still my favorite, but so far I&#39ve loved everything she&#39s written.

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