Love Untold by Ruth Jones

March is Reading Wales Month, hosted by Booker Talk. I have several books I intended to read for this event, but the first book I read has meant that I’ve only read a few of Roald Dahl’s Tales of the Unexpected (I’m hoping to write about them in the next few days). But first here is a book by Ruth Jones.

Transworld Digital| 2022| e-book| 502 pages| I bought it| 5*

Last year I read By Your Side by Ruth Jones because I loved the TV series Gavin and Stacey which Ruth Jones co-wrote with James Corden. I loved it. So when I saw Love Untold I knew I had to read it. And I loved it too. In fact I think this is one of the best books I’ve read this year so far.

Description from Amazon:

Grace is about to turn ninety and she doesn’t want parties or presents or fuss. She just wants a quiet celebration: her daily swim in the sea and a cup of tea with granddaughter Elin and great-granddaughter Beca. More than anything, she wants to heal the family rift that’s been breaking her heart for decades.

And to do that she must find her daughter, Alys – the only person who can help to put things right.But thirty years is a long time.And many words have been left unsaid. So is it too late now to heal the pain of the past?

This is a story about mothers and daughters: the love inherent in that bond and the heartache that miscommunication can bring. More than anything, it’s about the importance of being true to oneself. Meet Grace, Alys, Elin and Beca – a family you’ll come to know, and to love.

Once I started reading I just didn’t want to put this book down. It is so very readable, Ruth Jones is a great storyteller and I read it quickly despite it being 502 pages long. It is perfectly paced, alternating between each of the four women and showing their love for each other, as they each find their own way through life. They are all so well defined that there is never any doubt about who is who and where they fit into the story.

Theirs is a story of mother/daughter relationships, their ups and downs. Grace, a feisty independent lady almost ninety, who swims in the sea daily and enjoys life to the full is adamant, she doesn’t want a surprise party to celebrate her birthday; Elin, super organised and efficient, her granddaughter and a headteacher, is just as determined to give her one; Becca, Elin’s daughter is struggling at school and is sure is going to fail her exams much to her mother’s disappointment. Meanwhile, Alys, Grace’s daughter is estranged from the family, blaming Grace for what has gone wrong with her life.

It’s funny, both heartwarming, and at times a heart-breaking and emotional story, full of love. Grace longs to find out where Alys is and for her to come back home. It’s been thirty years since she last saw her after a breakdown in their relationship. Elin doesn’t want to know Ayls at all and as far as Becca knows, her grandmother died years ago. The history of the family is gradually revealed as the story progresses and I was completely bowled over by the depth of Ruth Jones’ writing. It’s not just about the female characters’ interactions, but also about their relationships with the men and lovers in their lives and the hurt and pain they all suffered. When I’m reading such an engrossing novel I wonder how it could possibly end. And when it arrived in line with the rest of the story the ending was both terribly sad and yet uplifting too.

So, the characters are great, the plot is complicated and complex covering their lives in depth and the setting in Wales is vividly described, bringing the scenes to life.The text is dotted with Welsh words and idioms, bringing back memories of the few words I remember my Taid (grandfather) saying to me when I was a child. As I said at the beginning I loved it and now want to read all of Ruth Jones’ books

Ruth Jones MBE is well known for her television work, most notably BBC One’s multi-award-winning Gavin and Stacey, co-written with James Corden, in which she played Nessa Jenkins. Ruth’s novels have sold over a million copies. Never Greener was a Sunday Times bestseller for fifteen weeks, three weeks at number one, as well as WH Smith Fiction Book of the Year 2018, a nominated Debut of the Year at the British Book Awards, and a Zoe Ball Book Club pick. Her second novel, Us Three, and her third novel, Love Untold, were also instant Sunday Times bestsellers. Love Untold was a Waterstones Paperback of the Year, as well as a Richard & Judy Book Club pick. Ruth’s latest novel is By Your Side.

WWW Wednesday 11 March 2026

WWW Wednesday is run by Taking on a World of Words.

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

I don’t take part in this every week, but try to do so once a month.

Currently I’m reading Love Untold by Ruth Jones, the story of four generations of women. I am loving this book – Ruth Jones has brought the characters of Grace, Alys, Elin and Beca wonderfully to life!

Grace is about to turn ninety and she doesn’t want parties or presents or fuss. She just wants a quiet celebration: her daily swim in the sea and a cup of tea with granddaughter Elin and great-granddaughter Beca. More than anything, she wants to heal the family rift that’s been breaking her heart for decades.

And to do that she must find her daughter, Alys – the only person who can help to put things right. But thirty years is a long time. And many words have been left unsaid. So is it too late now to heal the pain of the past?

The last book I read was The Inheritance of loss by Kiran Desai, the winner of several prizes including the 2006 Booker Prize. It alternates between the characters in the Himalayas and their family members who are working in New York.

I found it a bit of a slog as it took me ages to read it and thought it lacked focus. There are so many characters and the narrative jumps around between them all, so that it was hard to keep track of who they all were. I’m not even sure who the main characters are. It is also a depressing book about people who are unhappy, poor, repressed, left out, living in dreadful conditions. It’s heartbreaking in places and it is both tragic and thought provoking.

What will I read next? It could be The Keeper by Tana French, which was published on 2 April and is one of my NetGalley advanced reader copies. It’s the third book in the Cal Hooper series and I’ve read the first two so I’m keen to read this one too.

On a cold night in a remote Irish village, a girl goes missing.

Sweet, loving Rachel Holohan was about to be engaged to the son of the local big shot. Instead, she’s dead in the river.

In a place like this, her death isn’t simple. It comes wrapped in generations-old grudges and power struggles, and it splits the townland in two. Retired Chicago detective Cal Hooper has friends here now and he owes them loyalty, but his fiancée Lena wants nothing to do with Ardnakelty’s tangles. As the feud becomes more vicious, their settled peace starts to crack apart. And when they uncover a scheme that casts a new light on Rachel’s death and threatens the whole village, they find themselves in the firing line.
(Amazon)