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The Unlikely Pilgrimage Of Harold Fry: The uplifting and redemptive No. 1 Sunday Times bestseller

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The Unlikely Pilgrimage Of Harold Fry: The uplifting and redemptive No. 1 Sunday Times bestseller by Rachel Joyce

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By Rachel Joyce

avg rating

9 reviews

He just might be a hero for us all.


‘A gorgeously hopeful book’ OPRAH MAGAZINE

‘A funny book, a wise book, a charming book . One man’s walk along the length of England to save the life of a dying woman . I loved Harold and Maureen and their separate journeys .

Reviews

16 Jul 2022

Like A Man called Ove but not as thought provoking. Didn't have the ending I wanted. I liked Harold but he lacked backbone!

14 Nov 2018

RD-David

It was lovely “Feel Good” Story, unusual & thought provoking.

Easy to read – different!

Easy read a lovely story.

It is a refreshingly different story which caught my imagination. I loved the characters and how they interacted with each other and then relationship. It was engaging with gentle humour and very moving at times too. Highly Recommended.

KING CROSS ALTERNATIVE READERS GROUP.

13 Jul 2017

SarahBruch

This turned out to be another Marmite book with some people really loving it, while others found it to be really slow and boring. No-one actively hated the book which is good!

Those that enjoyed the book found it to be very unlifting and positive as an experience, whereas those who didn't enjoy it found it the complete opposite. They found it to be very ploddy and depressing. Some people felt that he might have lost his mind during certain parts of the book, he certainly seemed to be having difficulty with the world around him, and even staying upright at certain points.

Almost everyone was annoyed with his shoe choice, and his refusal to buy new ones. We felt that this was like the hairshirt that a traditional pilgrim may have worn, or maybe he felt that he had set out with them so he was going to finish with them? Maybe it gave the oddness of the walk a certain sense of normalcy to him to be wearing the same shoes and clothes?

We enjoyed watching the journey that Harolds wife went on during Harolds pilgrimage. She certainly changed the way she lived and thought about things drastically, maybe more so than Harold does. We felt that her friendship with Rex gave her an insight into Harolds friendship with Queenie, it made her step outside the comfort of her own home and think about things other than her son.

Overall we felt that there had been a general lack of communication with the family, both between Harold and his wife, and also between them and their son. This might have been why things went so spectacularly wrong with all the relationships prior to the pilgrimage. We felt that up until this point Harold was a bit of a stranger in his own life and his walk had nothing really to do with the letter, but more to do with him making a decision to change his life and do something positive to achieve something he felt was worthwhile. Although this walk appears to be all about delivering the letter and wanting Queenie to survive it could also be seen that the letter from Queenie was merely the catalyst to make Harold face up to the way he had lived his life and forced him to make that change. We also wondered whether Queenie wrote to anyone else to say goodbye, and if she did what they did about the letter?

A few members of the book club really felt they might like one day to just walk out of their front door and just walk. This seemed to be a surprisingly popular thing to want to do amongst the group, and to be fair i think at some point pretty much everyone gets the urge just to walk away from the stress of everyday life and just to rely upon yourself, just for a little while at least.

Overall we gave this book 7 out of 10.

15 Jun 2017

Kimberlie

I lovely book from start to finish. I really enjoyed the journey that Harold had to make to got to see Queenie. It is a very well written book and a book I didn't want to put down.

30 Apr 2015

I have not read a book for some time. "The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry" was given to me free of charge by Chichester Citizens Advice Bureau as part of World Book Night 2015. I was immediately hooked by Harold's journey and found it hard to put the book down. The quicker I read, the quicker Harold would reach Queenie!! I finished it in less than a week by taking extra bathes as an excuse to get through a few more pages and reading in the middle of the night, via mobile phone torch-light, so as not to wake my husband!! I'll be passing the book on to our Golf Club Library so that others can enjoy it too and hope to read "The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy" next as I want to learn more about her. Someone that can do such a selfless act for another human being must have an interesting story of her own to tell...........

20 Jan 2015

I really enjoyed it.

04 Jan 2015

I really enjoyed this book. I loved the thought of just stepping out one day and having time to think through all your problems and reflect on your life. It was a lovely thought provoking story.

05 Dec 2014

This was not the sort of book I would usually select, but I found it a thoroughly good read. The "hero" Harold is just an ordinary rather grey man who decides on a whim to do something extraordinary. Throughout his journey layers of his life story unfold and perceptions of past events change. I wanted to start reading for pleasure again and this was for me an ideal start. I would recommend this book as a thoughtful and gentle read.

07 Nov 2014

I thought the book was good and very enjoyable. The journey at the begging was very descriptive but near the middle it seemed that the author was running out of time and skimmed a big part of the journey. I like the character and got to know him very well through his journey.

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