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Published 15:31 18 May 2026 BST

The Snowflake author saw huge success when her debut was released in 2021, so my hopes were very high for her second release, Everything That Is Beautiful. The tender but dark novel is a masterclass in contemporary fiction, and one that reminded me of Marian Keyes’ work a lot.
Both Keyes and Nealon are professionals when it comes to writing about such serious and heavy topics, but balancing them perfectly with a tender tone, Irish wit, and a lot of heart.
On a recent trip to Scotland, I picked Everything That Is Beautiful as my holiday book, and I couldn’t have picked a better book.
This is the kind of story that has a familiar Irish honesty that feels both striking and comforting. The Foleys are a family many of us will relate to, or one we often admire from afar.
The darker themes in this novel completely ground the reader and will hook them from the very first page. The way Nealon writes is so sharp that each line hits you differently, but with just as much impact as the one before it.
Buy it here.
Buy it on Kindle here.
I’ve always had a soft spot for Irish contemporary fiction. Authors like Sally Rooney, Elaine Feeney, Claire Keegan, and Emma Donoghue opened my eyes to a genre that is now one of my favourites. They are behind some of the greatest Irish novels of the past decade, and one author following in their footsteps is the incredible Louise Nealon.
For Niamh Ryan, the Foleys are family. Her childhood flew by on their farm, playing with her best friend Peter and his sister Kate - all the while being doted on by their mother Helen and coached by their father Liam, a legendary former hurling player. Now, following a distressing series of events, the family ties are strained. Niamh receives drunken phone calls and messages from Peter, who can't understand what derailed their burgeoning relationship three years ago.
Meanwhile, Helen Foley is trying her best to escape her life by checking into guesthouses under the names of women she went to school with. In her life in Belfast, Kate is attempting to hold down a job and a relationship while carrying the weight of the family's secrets and feeling like she is the one to blame. As a family wedding looms, and the women find themselves face to face, the knotty love that still binds Niamh, Helen and Kate might just bring them back together again. Told through the perspectives of three very different women, Everything That Is Beautiful unfolds the story of one complicated family in startlingly honest prose. By turns funny and deeply moving, and with unmatched emotional intelligence, this is an unforgettable story of love and family, heartbreak and hope - and who we might become after we pick up the pieces.
This is a story that perfectly captures the complexities of a ‘close-knit’ family. It’ll both break your heart and later give you back some hope. Niamh and the Foleys truly feel like a family that lives across the road from you, and it’s a credit to Louise Nealon’s writing that these characters feel so life-like and relatable in parts. Louise Nealon is on her way to becoming one of our greatest authors, and I cannot wait to see what she does next.
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