Cover Image: Seven Days of Us

Seven Days of Us

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Member Reviews

Seven Days of Us is the quintessential heartwarming family read, a quick and quaint little holiday read to be devoured in one sitting. With flashes of wit, intellect and social reflection peppered in, Seven Days offers a great combination of laughter and insight, as we get to know these characters while they re-get to know each other. Imagine being stuck in your home for seven days with your family, unable to flee into the night, unable to avoid the unavoidable. To me, that sounds like the worse kind of torture! And Francesca Hornak brought that feeling to life in a meaningful way that allows the reader to identify with at least one of the characters, always a treat.

This read is not one that will bog you down, nor is it one that will stay with me for very long. Seven Days of Us is a novel that stays in its lane; it doesn't try to masquerade as something it's not, and I can respect that. I don't know that it was "sharply" anything, and the ending did hurry to a close like an urgent hand at your back. BUT, it is a read for the lovers of the quaint and cozy literary experience, a novel for anyone who loved the movie The Family Stone (2005), and delightful treat for those on holiday to pass the time and enjoy a chuckle. If that's what you're looking for, you've found a home and a warm mug of Earl Grey within the pages of Hornak's Seven Days. 3*

**Thank you so much to Berkley Publishing who reached out to me and sent me a physical ARC of this book!

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Honest review based on an ARC provided by Netgalley. Many thanks to the publisher for this opportunity.

This was a mix of genres and predicaments that didn't go well but it's still enjoyable. Very quick to read and hard to put down.

Olivia has a lot to deal now she's back from Africa to spend Christmas with her family: her younger sister who acts like the baby of the family, her mother who unknowingly to her has just found she has cancer, her father who also unknowingly to her received an email from a son he didn't know he had saying he'll visit him and the whole quarantine the whole family needs to submit themselves for seven days. On top of that, her secret lover has been diagnosed with Haag and Olivia isn't feeling too well herself, though with so much stress the cause could be any other.

I did like this novel, it had lots of irony and some interesting plot twists, plus it kept me reading. Still, even though I couldn't actually put it down, I was mildly disappointed in its development.

It took me a while to point out what kept bothering me. There were some suspects, Olivia is a terrible character, I tried hard, I understood her, but I couldn't like her at all. But the rest of them were okay, I actually liked Phoebe despite all of faults.

The story also tended to repeat itself a lot. Something would happen and then as the point of view changed, we'd get a whole report on how the other character felt about it even when it was more than obvious. Thanks to that, inevitable events, like Jesse finding the main characters, took half of the book to happen. While it did make me turn pages to reach that point, the merry-go-round of events made me frustrated. All the time, I felt like Shrek's donkey, "are we there yet?"

The big issue, I finally found out, was that the genre wasn't solidified. I'll explain. This book was classified as humor. It does have a lot of funny and ironic moments but I didn't laugh out loud in any scene. They were supposed to be very funny but the impact was softened thanks to all the drama that was usually happening at the same time. Books can cross genres, I'll all for it. Take The Heart's Invisible Furies, that was super dramatic but other times I laughed so loud I choked. Seven Days of Us failed to mix everything. I didn't laugh, I didn't cry and whenever I felt curious about some mystery, it took me back to another point of view of some random event instead of going forward.

Still, despite the unfulfilled promise of humor, this was a good novel. The story opens eyes to the work of doctors in infected zones, with details subtly given by the author without in any form sounding like a pamphlet. It also deals with culture shock—more exactly, the reverse culture shock. I'm sure this is good food for thought if you want to pick it for a book club or a buddy read. Perhaps, it mixed too much tragedy for such a presumably light story, also discussing homophobia, cancer among other hard issues.

It's not a book I'll forget so easily but I'm afraid it's also out of my top 5 to recommend this year.

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This book is about a family that is forced to stay quarantined for a period of time over the holidays. Each members secrets come out over the week together. They struggle with reality vs tradition during the holidays and struggle to be a close family.

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I really enjoyed this story!
Basic premise: the Birch family, Emma and Andrew, and daughters Olivia and Phoebe, are quarantined for seven days over the Christmas holidays due to Olivia's time as a doctor in Liberia, helping victims of the Haag virus (think Ebola). This is not a family that is good at spending time together.
Just think about spending Christmas with the family, with no runs to the movies, or simply to the store for respite.
All sorts of things happen--each of the family is dealing with serious issues that they are holding inside themselves, not sharing with the others. And of course, they aren't going to stay hidden.
Hornak's writing kept me interested in the story. Her characters are human, and not always likable.

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Seven Days of Us shared the story of a Brtish family quarantined during the Christmas holiday. It exposes flawed characters, secrets and more. Anyone with a family will recognize bits of themselves and family members. While not the humorous jaunt I expected, we do see character growth and Hormak kept me flipping the pages. Full review will publish at Caffeinated Book Reviewer on 10. 16

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Staying at your parents’ home for an extended Christmas visit can be stressful, particularly if you haven’t spent the holidays with them in years. Can you imagine how much harder it would be if your family were under quarantine?

This is the situation Olivia Birch finds herself in upon returning home after helping to treat victims of a dangerously contagious (and often deadly) epidemic. For the next week she’ll be stuck with parents Andrew and Emma, as well as her younger, newly engaged sister. Phoebe’s obsessed with her wedding, Olivia is trying to adjust to being home as she worries about an ill colleague, and everyone in the family has secrets they are hiding from the others. As the quarantine nears its end, the Birches will find themselves caught up in events that have life-changing implications for all of them.

SEVEN DAYS OF US is Hornak’s debut novel, and a very enjoyable one at that. I liked the premise of a family who are not exactly close being forced to spend time together due to a quarantine, especially when each of them are already feeling stressed about something. Guaranteed drama there, right?

If I had to pick one Birch I was most interested in, it has to be Olivia. I won’t go into exact details about why, but her story had some particularly heart-wrenching moments that really got to me. A very, very close second is Emma because what she was going through—and the way she tried to deal with it—just broke my heart time and again.

Phoebe annoyed me with her single-mindedness, and for most of the story I didn’t like her at all. I liked her much better by the end, but she mostly got on my nerves. And I hate to say it, but I enjoyed watching Andrew squirm in his attempts to keep his secret hidden from the rest of the family. Andrew’s arrogance made it hard for me to feel a lot of sympathy for him.

There’s a lot I can’t say about this book, because I don’t want to give anything away. It’s not exactly what I was expecting—I assumed this book would be far heavier on the humor than it was. Still, I enjoyed reading it and I’ll be interested to see what Hornak’s next novel will be about!

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Seven Days of Us grabs you from the very beginning by the cast of characters who must all spend the holiday together. Unlike your usual Christmas story, this dysfunctional family has skeletons and personalities that will keep you turning the pages to find out what happens next. The characters are fully filled out and will come to life as they struggle through the events that have forced them together. Yes, the family is forced together. For anyone looking for a good realistic fiction book that has a good storyline and believable modern characters, this is the book to read.

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The Birch family hasn't been close in many years, so spending an entire week together in quarantine over the Christmas holidays is an ordeal. Until they are certain that eldest daughter Olivia hasn't been infected with the deadly Haag virus while treating its victims in Liberia, they are virtually cut off from the outside world, holed up at the family's decrepit country manor house, each one desperately trying to keep his or her secrets hidden.

Other people have described this novel as both warm and funny, and I have to ask...what book were they reading? Despite some unbearably hot weather we had while I was reading, I felt chilled to the bone by the self-centered, dishonest characters and the gloomy, damp setting. Jesse irritated me the least, aside from Hornak's overuse of the word "like" in his speech (he's a grown man in his mid 30s--he wouldn't talk like a teenager). All the other characters were imprisoned in their individual silos of self-absorption. Obviously life isn't all sunshine and flowers, but honestly, it doesn't have to be that miserable--just tell the truth. Get over yourselves and pay attention to someone else for a change. Stop trying to hide cancer, job dissatisfaction, recently discovered children, forbidden relationships and protocol violations, sexual preferences, doubts, and all the other sources of anxiety. These things disconnect people from each other just as surely as they disconnected me from this whole cast of characters.

The story itself could have moved along more quickly, I felt. As soon as Jesse and Emma had their chat at the airport, I could see where that was headed, but it felt like an eternity before we got there. There was one twist at the end that I didn't see coming, but everything else was telegraphed way in advance. This isn't necessarily a deal-breaker for me, but it didn't help matters, especially when combined with the loose ends left dangling. (For example, Jesse and George's first meeting stayed a secret. Really??)

The tone of this novel strongly reminds me of The Art of Baking Blind by Sarah Vaughan--a book I've never been able to finish because I didn't like any of the characters--perhaps because both are British novels told from different points of view by deeply flawed characters? Thankfully for both authors, there are plenty of readers out there who enjoy spending time with people I can't stand.

For readers' advisors: character doorway is primary, setting secondary. Loads of profanity, including some of my least favorite words. Some sexual content, references. No violence.

I received a free advance reading copy (ebook) from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for my honest review.

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A week is a long time to spent with your family. Now imagine being quarantined, or rather under house arrest with them over Christmas.

For the first time in many years, the entire dysfunctional Birch family is going to spend the Christmas Holidays under one roof. In Francesca Hornak's novel, THE SEVEN DAYS OF US, the Birches are on lock-down, after Olivia comes backs from saving the world, needing to be quarantined - cutting everyone off from the rest of the world, including no Wi-Fi!

Eldest daughter, Olivia has returned from some faraway land where she was helping sick people making it imperative she stays quarantine for a week. Parents, Emma and Andrew who are usually off somewhere doing their good deeds are forced to stay at Weyfield Hall this Holiday. Youngest Phoebe must stay, while obsessing over her upcoming wedding. It's lockdown at the aging Weyfield Hall estate and quickly it feels as  if the walls are closing in. The family is cut-off from the outside world and each has their own misegas to content with. Family secrets and resentments, which have been easy to keep quiet, are coming to a boiling point and about to release.

Andrew locks himself in an office writing bitter restaurant reviews, while in his mind, reliving his past as a war correspondent. Emma has a few of her own secrets, which would be better not said, but are destined to shock the family.

Life in the house quickly becomes too close for comfort, but that's not thing compared to what happens when an unexpected arrives. Any reader who loves their family in small doses, will completely relate and be entertained reading THE SEVEN DAYS OF US, praying to God it never happens to them. ...especially around the Holidays.

Hornaks' novel is charming and filled with that sense of humor unique to British writers. It'd pair reading THE SEVEN DAYS OF US with two fingers of bourbon. It'll get you in the mood for "the most wonderful time of the year."

Francesca Hornak is a British author, journalist and former columnist for the Sunday Times.  SEVEN DAYS OF US  is her debut novel, published by Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Random House. Little Island Productions has pre-empted TV rights to the book.
Francesca's work has appeared in newspapers and magazines including The Sunday Times, The Guardian, Metro, Elle, Grazia, Stylist, Marie Claire, Cosmopolitan and Red. She is the author of two nonfiction books, History of the World in 100 Modern Objects: Middle Class Stuff (and Nonsense) and Worry with Mother: 101 Neuroses for the Modern Mama.
@FrancescaHornack

Thanks to NetGalley for providing an electronic copy of THE SEVEN DAYS OF US for an honest review.

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This book was both amusing and powerful. Hornak weaves seemingly disparate story threads into a relationship tapestry. Calling this a comedy of errors, while serving to entice readers looking for a humorous story with clever plot twists, belies the seriousness of the underlying themes: birth parent searches, sexual identity questions, communicable disease outbreaks, to name just a few. Recommend to fans of Liane Moriarty.

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I will definitely be giving this book out as a gift this holiday season -- in fact I already had a birthday recipient in mind but the book want published yet. The downside of reading ARCs. The holidays can be stressful for many families. Imagine the usual tensions amplified by a seven-day quarantine imposed because one family member, a doctor, has just returned from volunteering in an area struck by a deadly virus (think Ebola). I highly recommend. I received an ARC of this book from the publisher via Net Galley.

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A lot can happen when a family is quarantined for a week over the Christmas holiday and that is exactly what happened in this book. Olivia, one of the Birch daughters, is home for Christmas for the first time in years. She has been working as a doctor fighting an Ebola-type crisis in Liberia called Haag and has to be quarantined to sure she doesn't have the disease and spread it to the UK. This book is about secrets, the ramifications once they are revealed, and everyone in the family has a secret. The story is told in alternating voices from the various members so the reader learns what is going on in each person's mind and what has happened in the past. The family has some typical relationship problems like sibling rivalry and a husband and wife who have drifted apart, but as two non-family members arrive all the secrets are unleashed. The characters and often comedic story are engaging and well-told, and as a result of the secrets coming out, there is growth among the family members. This is a delightful book that will keep you turning the pages.

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Coming from a big family, the idea of being quarantined with my family for a week gives me a combination of a pleasure and dread. Hornak's debut provides enough storylines and characters to make this premise interesting and a pleasurable read..

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I received an Advanced Reader Copy of this book and was very excited to read it.  This book is great and I really enjoyed it. I will definitely be putting it on my list of beach reads for next summer!  Olivia is coming home from a trip to Liberia where she is helping treat victims of the Haag virus.  She needs to stay in quarantine for a week upon her return.  Her mother, so happy that she is home for Christmas, decides that the family will stay in quarantine together in the family vacation home.  After all, what is better than being stuck in a house with your family for a week? This story is full of twists and turns and fast paced.  While the story is slightly predictable, there were a few unexpected surprises and the characters are funny and believable.

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My Thoughts..........

" Bloody Brilliant!!"!!

I am constantly surprised and delighted by the amazing stories that pop out at me from, seemingly, nowhere. I am so grateful to the publishers who trust me with these books, trust me to give each one a thorough and open-minded reading. Seven Days Of Us is a thoughtful, funny glimpse of a family quarantined together during the Christmas holiday.

Told from the viewpoint of each character, knowing the various opinions of each as they are trapped in a stodgy old mansion, viewing each situation from various parts of the house and grounds was a unique experience. One wanted Christmas at a cherished old home, one came grudgingly, one is too carefree for an opinion, one would rather be anywhere else and one was a complete surprise! It was fun and funny. I admit that the British sense of humor sometimes Sails right over my head, I think I caught most of the humor in this one.

Don't think, though, that this is a laugh fest. It isn't. There is some humor, but this is a serious story with long-held secrets that can tear this family apart. A new secret, too.

I fell into this story and didn't emerge until I read the last page. There may have been a few tears toward the end, but it was okay. I happily recommend this book to everyone. Grab a copy and...

Enjoy!

2shay

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I really wanted to like this book. It seemed like a fun, light read that would make me laugh out loud, but I found the characters shallow and the plotting weak. There were too many unanswered questions, such as what is Haag (we don't find out specific details until 100 pages into the book), that I was left not caring about what happened to these people. Why would Jesse travel all the way to England to meet his biological father at the most stressful time of the year for most families when his father hasn't even responded to his request to meet? Does anyone actually like Olivia? Why is Phoebe marrying George? I had high hopes for this one, and unfortunately, they just didn't meet my expectations.

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"Seven Days of Us" is a debut novel by Francesca Hornak. The novel set in the UK and it is about a family that has to be quarantined for seven days over the Christmas period. Yes, I was reading a book about Christmas, in July... good way to get the Christmas spirit started.

It might just be the thought of having the spend seven days in quarantine with my family, but this novel did not do it for me. It felt like one of those books you've read already. Honestly, the plot felt very vanilla and already done, not that anything is wrong with that, but if you're going to do safe, at least make it less predictable. The characters were generic and clichéd some borderline annoying after 5 chapters.

What I will say is this, if you are looking for an easy, laid-back holiday read this Christmas, this book is right up your alley. There is the usual family drama that everyone is all too well aware of that might hold your interest and keep you entertained

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I am halfway through this book and it's great. I had high hopes for this author, having read her pieces in the Sunday Times Style magazine, and I wasn't disappointed. Francesca manages to skew modern life with her bitingly funny satire while threading the individual stories of the five main characters - most of whom are going through some very real issues - into a very readable book. I simply cannot put this book down.

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