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A Crying Shame
A Crying Shame
Nov 12, 2025 10:45 AM

Author:Renate Dorrestein

A Crying Shame

For ten-year-old Christine, home is a hostile, troubling place. Her mother reserves her affection for her younger, live-in-lover, and for Waldo, Christine's teenage brother. Christine viciously takes out her angry feelings on her Barbies and on a weaker girl in her class. Then on a family holiday in Scotland, a tragic accident occurs for which Christine blames herself, and panic-stricken, she runs away with her four-year-old brother, and hides in the back of a stranger's car.

Agnes Stam is an elderly Dutch spinster, making her annual summer pilgrimage to her family's holiday cottage on Mull. When she discover the little stowaways in her car, she fails to report the missing children and allows them to stay. And so a little girl with a big, guilty secret becomes a lonely old woman's salvation - and also her nemesis.

Reviews

A chilling and disturbing novel in which family represents the heart of darkness.

—— The Times

Stark and gently funny, this is a tragic and lovely novel.

—— Guardian

Reading the Dutch novelist Renate Dorrestein is an infallible reminder of how rare it is to find a gripping story about the old and the very young ... an effectively touching translation of a tale of three disregarded nobodies.

—— Independent Magazine

Her novels read like film scripts...psychological thrillers in which what's most to be feared is closest to home...painfully cutting, and surprisingly funny...a truly courageous writer.

—— Independent

Gripping and unexpected, dramatic yet understated ... well-crafted, moving and compelling tale.

—— Oxford Times

'Something terrible has happened ... But there are also some very funny moments ... the pace and energy of which is compelling, owing to Hester Velmans's fine translation.'

—— The Lady

Nowhere is the author's overriding concern with the darker aspects of Victorian society and values better expressed than in his last completed novel

—— Daily Mail

Book of the Week

—— Henry Sutton , Daily Mirror

The novel's racier encounters might make even Jilly fans blush

—— Independent

Simon infuses it, bit by bit, with the expectation of a gratifying conclusion, one that rewards an indomitable romantic and parental love for its many surprises

—— Boston Globe

Readers of Rachel Simon's fiction know that she's a hopeful romantic. Her work is smart and laced with sweetness, presenting an optimistic view even when her subject matter is bleak. It's a perspective Simon achieves, in part, by taking an unexpected angle on her subject - and subjects. She brings an anthropologist's eye to her stories, describing characters, action, and emotion as if she were new to the weary world. By seeing anew what comes naturally to most of us - cognition, memory, hearing, speech - Simon illuminates her characters' interior lives and finds new and forgotten meaning in familiar symbols. The novel's resolution is unexpected and satisfying, allowing for empathy with Lynnie's conflicted family, who ' put her away.' Simon's thorough research, detailed in an author's note, is evident in her careful crafting of this moving story. Those readers familiar with her insightful memoir, Riding the Bus with my Sister, will find this new fictional work an opportune meeting of author and material

—— Philidelphia Enquirer

Improbably beautiful

—— Christian Science Monitor

A gripping yet tender storyline that unfolds as the insurmountable obstacles are faced with bravery and loyalty. You're sure to be reaching for the tissues

—— Candis

A moving and disturbing tale of love and loyalty. And you might cry

—— Sun Buzz Magazine

A treat of a read, not least because of the wonderful, rolling ease with which Lodge writes. Or, rather, with which it reads - prose like this does not come without effort.

—— Daily Mail

Sex-charged whopper on the life and works of HG Wells

—— The Word

Colourful characters and outrageous events abound. Confident, pacy writing keeps the reader wondering what Wells will get up to next and pondering the complex relationships to which he seems addicted

—— Michael Sherborne , Literary Review

Very, very good.... So confidently are facts and flights of imaginative fancy interwoven that readers will find themselves unwilling - and unable - to distinguish between the two

—— Country Life

Consistently absorbing and enjoyable. I doubt whether a better way could have been found to bring the phenomenon that was H. G. Wells to life

—— Allan Massie , Stand Point

Biographical fiction is on an upswing, to judge by this lively novel, faithful to the facts but free to interpret feelings

—— Saga

A Man of Parts has the lovely, loquacious qualities that typify eccentric wonders such as The War of the Worlds and The History of Mr Polly. David Lodge reminds us that Wells, an imperfect man, is still a worthy witness to his own world and to those worlds that may yet to come.

—— Andrew Tate , Third Way Magazine

Lodge understands the Edwardian literary and political scene extremely well, and traces Wells's entanglements with the louche world of Fabians and free lovers with real intimacy

—— Times Literary Supplement

As protean, elusive but compelling as it's hero, David Lodge's bio-novel about HG Wells breaks all the rules but still grips the reader - like Wells himself

—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent

A wry, racy and absorbing biographical novel

—— Benjamin Evans , Telegraph, Seven Magazine

Lodge knows how to tease the inner man out from behind the historical figure, subjecting Wells to probing interviews throughout the book in which his deeper beliefs and contradictions are laid bare

—— Alastair Mabbot , Herald

This fictionalised version of HG Wells dramatises the author's life, which was full of politics, writing and women

—— Daily Telegraph

David Lodge's HG Wells was both a visionary and a chancer; as arrogant as he was insecure; with as many noble goals as base instincts; a mass of very human contradictions; as Lodge has it, a man of parts

—— Sunday Express
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