Description

Book Synopsis

* THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER *

Young Mary Newton, born into a large Irish family in a small Watford semi, was always getting into trouble. When she wasn’t choking back fits of giggles at Holy Communion or eating Chappie dog food for a bet, she was accidentally setting fire to the local school. Mary was a trouble magnet. And, unlike her brothers, somehow she always got caught…

Britain in the 1970s was a world where R White's lemonade was drunk in secret, curry came in a cardboard box marked Vesta and Beanz meant Heinz. In Mary’s family, money was scarce. Clothes were hand-me-downs, holidays a church day out to Hastings and meals were variations on the potato. But these were also good times which revolved around the force of nature that was Theresa, Mary’s mum.

When tragedy unexpectedly blows this world apart, a new chapter in Mary’s life opens up. She takes to the camp and glamour of Harrods window dressing like a duck to water, and Mary, Queen of Shops is born…



Trade Review
Portas writes with wit and verve... The book has the narrative charm of Anita and Me or The Buddha of Suburbia; so when the darkness comes it's genuinely shocking. Shop Girl is a testament to survival. But most of all it is a love letter to her mother, Mary Flynn. Every joke, argument, cake baked, tenderness proffered, sings off the page. 'To my mum - How lucky was I getting you' is the book's dedication. And we are lucky to read it. * Independent *
Enormous fun, readable, nostalgic, poignant and authentic... Read it then give it to your daughter * Daily Express *
Absolutely fabulous... Colourful, camp and unexpectedly heart-rending, I loved it. -- Caroline Sanderson * The Bookseller *
Her school stories are hilarious... a nostalgia-fest * Heat *
Portas's memoir is witty, fascinating and, at times, sad but always compelling * Stylist *
It breezes along seamlessly... with levels of charm, depth and humour * The Observer *
Poignantly described * Telegraph *
Heartbreaking * The Times *
Inspiring and emotional * OK! *
[A] delightful memoir... full of evocative images * Choice Magazine *
Warm, witty and evocative, Shop Girl is a cloudless trip down memory lane * The Tablet *
Undeniably compelling * Irish Sunday Independent *
Searingly honest... A fascinating memoir * Hello! *
[Shop Girl] is both a beautifully nostalgic look back at a world long gone and a testament to family ties and our inherent strength * Irish Independent *

Shop Girl

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    £11.69

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    RRP £12.99 – you save £1.30 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Mary Portas

    2 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Shop Girl by Mary Portas

      Publisher: Transworld Publishers Ltd
      Publication Date: 05/05/2016
      ISBN13: 9781784160319, 978-1784160319
      ISBN10: 1784160318

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      * THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER *

      Young Mary Newton, born into a large Irish family in a small Watford semi, was always getting into trouble. When she wasn’t choking back fits of giggles at Holy Communion or eating Chappie dog food for a bet, she was accidentally setting fire to the local school. Mary was a trouble magnet. And, unlike her brothers, somehow she always got caught…

      Britain in the 1970s was a world where R White's lemonade was drunk in secret, curry came in a cardboard box marked Vesta and Beanz meant Heinz. In Mary’s family, money was scarce. Clothes were hand-me-downs, holidays a church day out to Hastings and meals were variations on the potato. But these were also good times which revolved around the force of nature that was Theresa, Mary’s mum.

      When tragedy unexpectedly blows this world apart, a new chapter in Mary’s life opens up. She takes to the camp and glamour of Harrods window dressing like a duck to water, and Mary, Queen of Shops is born…



      Trade Review
      Portas writes with wit and verve... The book has the narrative charm of Anita and Me or The Buddha of Suburbia; so when the darkness comes it's genuinely shocking. Shop Girl is a testament to survival. But most of all it is a love letter to her mother, Mary Flynn. Every joke, argument, cake baked, tenderness proffered, sings off the page. 'To my mum - How lucky was I getting you' is the book's dedication. And we are lucky to read it. * Independent *
      Enormous fun, readable, nostalgic, poignant and authentic... Read it then give it to your daughter * Daily Express *
      Absolutely fabulous... Colourful, camp and unexpectedly heart-rending, I loved it. -- Caroline Sanderson * The Bookseller *
      Her school stories are hilarious... a nostalgia-fest * Heat *
      Portas's memoir is witty, fascinating and, at times, sad but always compelling * Stylist *
      It breezes along seamlessly... with levels of charm, depth and humour * The Observer *
      Poignantly described * Telegraph *
      Heartbreaking * The Times *
      Inspiring and emotional * OK! *
      [A] delightful memoir... full of evocative images * Choice Magazine *
      Warm, witty and evocative, Shop Girl is a cloudless trip down memory lane * The Tablet *
      Undeniably compelling * Irish Sunday Independent *
      Searingly honest... A fascinating memoir * Hello! *
      [Shop Girl] is both a beautifully nostalgic look back at a world long gone and a testament to family ties and our inherent strength * Irish Independent *

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