The international bestselling debut about friendship and love--featuring the life-changing relationship between an anxious young reporter and an eighty-six-year-old lifelong swimmer that
"follows in the footsteps of the enormously popular A Man Called Ove ...charming and heartwarming" ( Kirkus Reviews ). We're never too old to make new friends--or make a difference. Rosemary Peterson has lived in Brixton, London, all her life, but everything is changing. The library where she used to work has closed. The family grocery store has become a trendy bar. And now the lido, an outdoor pool where she's swum daily since its opening, is threatened with closure by a local housing developer. It was at the lido that Rosemary escaped the devastation of World War II; here she fell in love with her husband, George; here she found community during her marriage and since George's death. Twentysomething Kate Matthews has moved to Brixton and feels desperately alone. A once-promising writer, she now covers forgettable stories for her local paper. That is, until she's assigned to write about the lido's closing. Soon Kate's portrait of the pool focuses on a singular woman: Rosemary. And as Rosemary slowly opens up to Kate, both women are nourished and transformed in ways they never thought possible.
"Charming [and] an unusually poignant tale of married love" ( The Washington Post ), Mornings with Rosemary is a feel-good novel that captures the heart and spirit of a community across generations--an irresistible tale of love, loss, aging, and friendship. *Originally published as The Lido
Libby Page is a Sunday Times and USA Today bestselling author of six warm-hearted novels about community, connection, and the quiet ways people save each other. She grew up in a small town in North Dorset, England — an upbringing she has described as shaping her deep interest in the pockets of belonging that people carve out for themselves in ordinary life. She moved to London to study Fashion Journalism at The London College of Fashion, where she quickly found that the city could feel alienating as much as exciting — an experience she later explored in her debut novel. After graduating, she worked as a journalist at The Guardian and in marketing, writing all the while.
Even before her novels, Page was writing for reasons that mattered. At sixteen she created an illustrated book called Love Pink to raise money for Breast Cancer Care. Later, as a young professional navigating London's unpaid internship culture, she became a vocal campaigner for fairer, paid internships — speaking on television, protesting at London Fashion Week, and eventually addressing parliament in support of the cause. That same instinct to advocate — for community, for fairness, for the overlooked — runs through all of her fiction.
Her debut novel, The Lido (published in the US as Mornings with Rosemary), was pre-empted within twenty-four hours of submission for six figures in both the UK and the US. Published in April 2018, it entered the Sunday Times bestseller list within three days of publication, peaked at number four, and stayed on the list for five consecutive weeks. It went on to be published in more than twenty-five territories worldwide, won the WHSmith Thumping Good Read Award, and became one of the defining novels of the "Up Lit" movement — a term coined that same year to describe fiction that is genuinely uplifting without being saccharine. The Observer called it "a joyful celebration of community and friendship."
Five more novels have followed, each anchored in a specific place and the lives of people trying to find their footing: The 24-Hour Café (2020), set over the course of a single day in a London café that never closes; The Island Home (2021), a story of secrets and belonging set on a remote Scottish island; The Vintage Shop of Second Chances (2023), which follows a single yellow dress across continents and generations; and The Lifeline (2024), a much-anticipated return to the world of The Lido, this time exploring postpartum mental health with the warmth and honesty her readers have come to expect.
Her sixth novel, This Book Made Me Think of You (2026), is her most explicitly bookish work yet — a story of a grieving widow who discovers her late husband arranged twelve books for her, one for each month of her first year without him, sending her on a series of reading-inspired adventures around the world. An instant USA Today bestseller, it was selected as a BBC Radio 2 Book Club pick and received a starred review from Kirkus, which called it "the perfect cozy read for book lovers, sure to break and heal hearts." Alongside writing, Page is a writing coach at The Novelry, where she mentors aspiring authors. She is also an avid outdoor swimmer — a passion that flows unmistakably through her work. She lives in Somerset with her husband and young son.
Born: May 13, 1992
Birthplace: North Dorset, England
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The international bestselling debut about friendship and love--featuring the life-changing relationship between an anxious young reporter and an eighty-six-year-old lifelong swimmer that"follows in the footsteps of the enormously popular A Man Called ...
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The international bestselling debut about friendship and love--featuring the life-changing relationship between an anxious young reporter and an eighty-six-year-old lifelong swimmer that
"follows in the footsteps of the enormously popular A Man Called Ove ...charming and heartwarming" ( Kirkus Reviews ). We're never too old to make new friends--or make a difference. Rosemary Peterson has lived in Brixton, London, all her life, but everything is changing. The library where she used to work has closed. The family grocery store has become a trendy bar. And now the lido, an outdoor pool where she's swum daily since its opening, is threatened with closure by a local housing developer. It was at the lido that Rosemary escaped the devastation of World War II; here she fell in love with her husband, George; here she found community during her marriage and since George's death. Twentysomething Kate Matthews has moved to Brixton and feels desperately alone. A once-promising writer, she now covers forgettable stories for her local paper. That is, until she's assigned to write about the lido's closing. Soon Kate's portrait of the pool focuses on a singular woman: Rosemary. And as Rosemary slowly opens up to Kate, both women are nourished and transformed in ways they never thought possible.
"Charming [and] an unusually poignant tale of married love" ( The Washington Post ), Mornings with Rosemary is a feel-good novel that captures the heart and spirit of a community across generations--an irresistible tale of love, loss, aging, and friendship. *Originally published as The Lido
Libby Page is a Sunday Times and USA Today bestselling author of six warm-hearted novels about community, connection, and the quiet ways people save each other. She grew up in a small town in North Dorset, England — an upbringing she has described as shaping her deep interest in the pockets of belonging that people carve out for themselves in ordinary life. She moved to London to study Fashion Journalism at The London College of Fashion, where she quickly found that the city could feel alienating as much as exciting — an experience she later explored in her debut novel. After graduating, she worked as a journalist at The Guardian and in marketing, writing all the while.
Even before her novels, Page was writing for reasons that mattered. At sixteen she created an illustrated book called Love Pink to raise money for Breast Cancer Care. Later, as a young professional navigating London's unpaid internship culture, she became a vocal campaigner for fairer, paid internships — speaking on television, protesting at London Fashion Week, and eventually addressing parliament in support of the cause. That same instinct to advocate — for community, for fairness, for the overlooked — runs through all of her fiction.
Her debut novel, The Lido (published in the US as Mornings with Rosemary), was pre-empted within twenty-four hours of submission for six figures in both the UK and the US. Published in April 2018, it entered the Sunday Times bestseller list within three days of publication, peaked at number four, and stayed on the list for five consecutive weeks. It went on to be published in more than twenty-five territories worldwide, won the WHSmith Thumping Good Read Award, and became one of the defining novels of the "Up Lit" movement — a term coined that same year to describe fiction that is genuinely uplifting without being saccharine. The Observer called it "a joyful celebration of community and friendship."
Five more novels have followed, each anchored in a specific place and the lives of people trying to find their footing: The 24-Hour Café (2020), set over the course of a single day in a London café that never closes; The Island Home (2021), a story of secrets and belonging set on a remote Scottish island; The Vintage Shop of Second Chances (2023), which follows a single yellow dress across continents and generations; and The Lifeline (2024), a much-anticipated return to the world of The Lido, this time exploring postpartum mental health with the warmth and honesty her readers have come to expect.
Her sixth novel, This Book Made Me Think of You (2026), is her most explicitly bookish work yet — a story of a grieving widow who discovers her late husband arranged twelve books for her, one for each month of her first year without him, sending her on a series of reading-inspired adventures around the world. An instant USA Today bestseller, it was selected as a BBC Radio 2 Book Club pick and received a starred review from Kirkus, which called it "the perfect cozy read for book lovers, sure to break and heal hearts." Alongside writing, Page is a writing coach at The Novelry, where she mentors aspiring authors. She is also an avid outdoor swimmer — a passion that flows unmistakably through her work. She lives in Somerset with her husband and young son.
Born: May 13, 1992
Birthplace: North Dorset, England
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New (180 available)
Ships Separately |
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