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Now available in the US—the dark horse literary novel that has taken Britain by storm! In the best tradition of Tessa Hadley, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Ann Patchett—an astonishing, keenly observed period piece about an ordinary British woman in the 1950s whose dutiful life takes a sudden turn into a pitched battle between propriety and unexpected passion. A BEST BOOK OF 2020 PICK: Daily Telegraph, Sunday Times Ireland, Daily Express 1957: Jean Swinney is a feature writer on a local paper in the southeast suburbs of London. Clever but with limited career opportunities and on the brink of forty, Jean lives a dreary existence that includes caring for her demanding widowed mother, who rarely leaves the house. It’s a small life with little joy and no likelihood of escape. That all changes when a young woman, Gretchen Tilbury, contacts the paper to claim that her daughter is the result of a virgin birth. Jean seizes onto the bizarre story and sets out to discover whether Gretchen is a miracle or a fraud. But the more Jean investigates, the more her life becomes strangely (and not unpleasantly) intertwined with that of the Tilburys, including Gretchen’s gentle and thoughtful husband Howard, who mostly believes his wife, and their quirky and charming daughter Margaret, who becomes a sort of surrogate child for Jean. Gretchen, too, becomes a much-needed friend in an otherwise empty social life. Jean cannot bring herself to discard what seems like her one chance at happiness, even as the story that she is researching starts to send dark ripples across all their lives…with unimaginable consequences. Both a mystery and a love story, Small Pleasures is a quintessentially British novel in the style of The Remains of the Day, about conflict between personal fulfilment and duty; a novel that celebrates the beauty and potential for joy in all things plain and unfashionable.
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DNF ~60%
Basically the entire blurb had happened at this 60% mark, and I was finding the book to be dull. I didn't quite believe how fast Jean fell for Howard, there was something fishy going on with Gretchen, the mom was annoying...
I was listening to the audiobook and it was just 'fine'. I was bored.
Apparently there's a ton of action in the latter 40%, based on what my book club friends told me.
I guess Gretchen was basically trying to arrange Jean for Howard, and G left to go be with the childhood friend that Jean had dug up during the investigation. But then G finds it not really all she thought it would be, and asks to come back to Howard, who has to choose between the two. He decides to choose Jean and sets out to come meet her, but dies in the train crash that was the newspaper article prologue.
I think I'd have hated it based on the ending, so I'm glad I stopped where I did.