Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Saturday, March 26, 2022

My Mother's Gift by Steffanie Edward



Book Description:

Can your heart belong somewhere that you’ve never called home?

When Erica gets a phone call to say her mother, Ione, is ill in St Lucia, she knows she must go to her. Though the island – the place of her mother’s birth – is somewhere that Erica has never seen as her homeland.

Even when the plane touches down in the tropical paradise, with its palm trees swaying in the island breeze, the sound of accents so like her mother’s own calling loud in the air, Erica doesn’t find herself wanting to stay a moment longer than she has to.

But stepping into her mother’s house, she is shocked by what she finds. Her mother’s memory is fading, her once-immaculate house is now dirty and messy, and she’s refusing help from anyone but family. And Erica knows she must stay with her, even though it means leaving everything else behind.

What she doesn’t know is that – even as her mother’s memories get worse – Ione still has a final gift for her daughter. Because the unspoken secrets of their past are about to emerge, changing everything Erica thought she knew about her mother, her home, and who she really is…

A captivating tale of grief, love, and what it means to find home, perfect for fans of Andrea Levy, Jojo Moyes and Amanda Prowse

My thoughts:

The main character, Erica, leads a busy and fulfilling life in London.  She is the Deputy Head of her school, is good friends with her boss and knows she stands a good chance of being promoted to her post when she retires.  Her daughter, Millie, is grown and independent, leading a good life of her own.  Meanwhile her mother, Ione, has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's type dementia and chose to return to the place of her birth, St Lucia.  Erica travels to see her during school holidays, knowing that Ione's sister lives close by to keep an eye out for problems.  It is the sort of smaller community where everyone knows everyone and it is where her mother considers to be home.  However, inevitably dementia progresses and Aunt Betty phones Erica, so that she gets permission to fly out before the school holidays begin to try and sort out her mother's predicament.

Dementia is a cruel and challenging disease.  Erica is faced with difficult situations and decisions, but she also has the opportunity to reflect on what matters most in her own life and what her future holds.  

There is a strong sense of place in this book.  I have never been fortunate enough to visit St Lucia, nor indeed the Caribbean, but Steffanie Edward paints a vivid picture of life on the island and it sounds glorious: the heat, the sea, the tropical fruits and flowers.

I really enjoyed reading this story and thought it balanced loss and hope superbly.  An excellent read.



Author Bio:
Steffanie Edward was born in St Lucia, brought up in London and now straddles between the two.
Anancy, Crick-crick and other Caribbean folk stories have been a part of her life since childhood.  In her late teens, she enjoyed reading Susan Howatch and nooks on slavery.  Her absolute favourite reads have been Wild Seed by Octavia E Butler, and Woman at Point Zero by Naawal El Saadawi.
Her writing career started with short stories, five of which have been published. Her first attempt at writing a novel was over twenty years ago, whilst living and working in Abu Dhabi.  That novel, Yvette, didn't make it into print, but the main protagonist, Yvette, has muscled her way into Stephanie's debut novel, This Other Island.

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Beneath the Surface by Fiona Neill




I just finished reading this compelling, original story and was blown away by it.  Set in the fen land around Cambridge, it features a family which outwardly seems cohesive and strong, but who knows what goes on beneath the surface?  Grace married Patrick in the hope of love, security and a happy family.  Many of us do this, but who knows Grace's motivation, and how her own upbringing will shape her adult life?  Is Patrick as safe and sensible as he seems?  Their two daughters, Lilly (17) and Mia (9) are intriguing characters.  Lilly is very intelligent, popular, beautiful and stylish, while Mia is a creative and curious soul who struggles to write out her ideas but gives her all when subjects catch her imagination.  Everyone has their secrets, and struggles to keep them shut into their boxes but the pressure increases.  When Lilly is taken ill in class at school, is she grievously sick, the first victim of an epidemic or is something else at play?  Can the lid be kept down on what lies beneath the surface?  What is the truth and can they survive?  An intriguing, intelligent and topical book which rewards the reader and would be an excellent book group choice, it really deserves to be widely read.

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Everything You Told Me by Lucy Dawson



I experienced some problems reading this tale, because there was a disconnect between what I know and what was being said in it - but this was somewhat explained in the way it all turned out, and I'll say no more, because I wish to remain spoiler-free!  Aside from this difficulty, I thought this a very interesting and unusual story and I could easily identify with poor, frazzled and exhausted Sally, as two of my three children believed that sleep was a waste of their lives.  However, thankfully I never found myself, like Sally, waking alone in the back of a taxi at the far end of the country in pyjamas and a raincoat, and with just enough cash to cover the fare.  This is a pacey and complex story which contains plenty to keep the reader guessing as a nightmarish series of events unfolds and a family's safety and happiness is jeopardised..

Sunday, January 15, 2017

The Secret Lives of the Amir Sisters by Nadiya Hussain



I approached this story with trepidation: Nadiya Hussain is an engaging, charming and likeable person on TV, but that does not mean she can tell a story and not all celebrities can write.  I was relieved to find myself quickly immersed and engrossed in the secret lives of the Amir sisters (from the only brown/British Asian family in the small community of Wyvernage).  The book explores themes of identity, family, love, culture and expectations.  A major crisis has repercussions for each of the sisters as secrets are revealed which shake the whole family to the core, and all of them must change.  The sisters are all interesting and likeable, the story is fascinating and very well crafted, and there is plenty to think about.  It is a very good read.

In the acknowledgements at the end, Nadiya gives thanks to her writer.  It is an excellent collaboration.

Tuesday, December 06, 2016

The Food of Love, by Amanda Prowse


This is a very engaging, engrossing but harrowing and heartbreaking story about how a previously happy family copes with their daughter's mental health problem and the repercussions that this has on their relationships and lives.  As a mother, it was very easy to identify with Freya Braithwaite and the account of her marriage and the problems that unexpectedly beset their family.  She is  a food writer and food enthusiast, and there is an extreme poignancy in what happens to her daughter.  The story reads like a psychological thriller in many ways, and I found it a compulsive page-turner while dreading what would happen next.  It's a powerful piece of writing.

Friday, August 12, 2016

The Couple Next Door by Shari Lapena





This book is such a killer chiller thriller.  Every parent's nightmare is the disappearance of their baby, so when this happens to Anne and Marco while they are visiting their next door neighbours with the baby alarm as  their babysitter suddenly has to let them down, it is all too easy to identify with their distress, panic and pain when, on one of their half-hourly checks, little Cora has gone from her cot.  At six months old, she cannot have removed herself, so what has happened?  Clearly someone has taken her, but who, and why?  So the waiting game begins,  and so does the guilt, and so does the uncovering of secrets.  Anne is forced to consider just who would take her baby and why, and who she can trust.  The police are involved - will they solve the mystery and return the baby home?  
This tale is gripping and compulsive reading, with so many twists and turns that it keeps the reader guessing most enjoyably, right to the shocking end.  An excellent grip lit read.

Sunday, August 07, 2016

Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty


Thursday, April 07, 2016

The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper by Phaedra Patrick


A truly charming tale of Arthur Pepper, who is numbed and shocked after the death of Miriam, his wife and the love of his life. A strict routine gives him the structure to go on, but it is a joyless existence.  A surprising find sets him on a journey which will allow him to make further discoveries and discover that his life is not over, that there is life after loss.  The plot is clever and this story is well told: a delight to read.

Thursday, February 04, 2016

Viral by Helen Fitzgerald


Stupendous, topical novel: beautifully if strongly written, heart-rending and thought provoking.  I  believe this book would make an excellent book club choice because it raises so many important, discussion-worthy issues and questions as well as being a jolly good read.   A twenty-first century nightmare that feels so close to home, a conundrum of who is a victim and what is a crime, an exploration of nature versus nurture, a coming of age story - Viral encompasses all of this and more.  Brilliant.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Sunset at the Lakes

Season's Greetings and Happy New Year!

 


How many people know that North Somerset has its own Lake District? The lakes are visible on the UK weather map and are properly water reservoirs. Blagdon Lake is also stocked for fishing, while Chew Lake is a wildlife reserve. We had a family lunch out at the wonderful Bear and Swan in Chew Magna yesterday, which I would recommend for its delicious food and excellent service in an attractive setting, and then went on to drive home through the Lakes. We stopped briefly in the chilly lay-by at the end of Chew Lake to wish the water fowl a Happy New Year before driving through the twilight to the warmth of home