I’ve been a bit quiet on the blogging front recently whilst Mum was so poorly and following her recent death so it feels somewhat poignant that the book I am reviewing today has grief as one of its themes.
My enormous thanks to Isabel Williams at Harper Collins for sending me a copy of The Secrets of the Harbour House by Liz Fenwick all those weeks ago. I’m delighted finally to share my review which was written some time ago!
The Secrets of the Harbour House is published by HQ on 17th July 2025 and is available for purchase through the publisher links here.
The Secrets of the Harbour House
When Kerensa is sent by her father’s auction house to catalogue a neglected house overlooking the sea in Newlyn, Cornwall, it’s a welcome escape. Once the home of two female artists, Harbour House is a treasure trove, but one painting in particular catches Kerensa’s eye – a hypnotically sensual portrait of a beautiful young woman which dominates the hallway.
Captivated and intrigued, Kerensa finds herself piecing together the enigma of Bathsheba Kernow, a fiercely talented young artist who left St Ives almost a hundred years before, eager to escape a society that wouldn’t understand her, and her sweeping journey from the underbelly of Paris to the heady luxury of Venice, where a chance encounter would change her life for ever, drawing her into the most dangerous and forbidden of love affairs.
For Kerensa, still reeling with a grief of her own and facing an uncertain future in love, Harbour House will have secrets that will change her life too, and in ways she could never have imagined…
My Review of The Secrets of the Harbour House
This story has absolutely everything a read wants in order to be completely captivated. There’s art, travel, history, mystery and deep, deep passion that thrums through the pages of The Secrets of Harbour House, making it utterly compelling.
The plot is crafted with obvious care and I loved the story, but even better was the writerly depiction of time and place and the exquisite artistry of description. I know Liz Fenwick is a painter as well as an author and this shines through her writing because every description is so vivid and beautiful.
Obviously, secrets are at the heart of the narrative. It’s not possible to mention them all for fear of spoiling the story, but I’d defy any reader not to be enthralled. There are secrets because of attitudes to sexuality, there are professional, political and family secrets, and, even more importantly, there are secrets we keep hidden deep within us, about ourselves and our lives. I found this aspect hugely thought provoking.
I loved the touches of real historical figures, dates, and accuracy because they lent an authenticity to the narrative. The inclusion of Hitler, Mussolini and Marlene Dietrich provide a veneer of threat that heightens the reader’s awareness of the danger Sheba and Katherine place themselves in.
With Kerensa and Sheba dominating the narrative voice through their first person accounts set in the two timelines, we get to know, understand and love them thoroughly. Through their lives, Liz Fenwick illustrates how history can repeat itself and she depicts both feminism and toxic masculinity to perfection. This is not just a story that entertains, but rather one that strips back the veneer of society and reveals the frequently duplicitous and murky reality beneath it with pinpoint accuracy.
I loathed Paul with such a visceral passion that I had to read the parts where he was present in small doses. He raised my blood pressure far too high! Simon too is a prime example of privileged masculinity that tramples the finer feelings of those deemed socially or intellectually inferior. I’d have given anything to crawl into the pages of the book and spend half an hour with each of them…
But for all the consummate story telling, creation of character and beautiful settings of Cornwall and Venice, it was the depth of emotion in The Secrets of the Harbour House that I found so mesmerising. The author engendered such strong reaction in me as a reader that I experienced a huge range of emotion from loathing and rage to compassion and sadness. This is a story that reverberates long after it is read.
Sumptuous, sensual and sizzling with tension, The Secrets of the Harbour House is a book not to be missed and I loved it. It’s one of my books of the year.
About Liz Fenwick
Called ‘the queen of the contemporary Cornish novel’ by the Guardian, Liz Fenwick is the author of nine books, including The River Between Us which won the Popular Romantic Fiction Award from the Romantic Novelists’ Association. She lives with her husband and two mad cats near the Helford River in Cornwall. When not writing Liz is reading, painting, knitting, plot walking, and procrastinating on social media.
For further information, follow Liz on Twitter/X @liz_fenwick, Instagram @liz_fenwick, and Facebook and visit her website.