Author:Howard Jacobson
Marvin Kreitman, the luggage baron of South London, lives for sex. Or at least he lives for women. At present he loves four women - his mother, his wife Hazel, and his two daughters - and is in love with five more. Charlie Merriweather, on the other hand, nice Charlie, loves just the one woman, also called Charlie, the wife with whom he has been writing children's books and having nice sex for twenty years. Once a week the two friends meet for a Chinese lunch, contriving never quite to have the conversation they would like to have - about fidelity and womanising, and which makes you happier. Until today. It is Charlie who takes the dangerous step of asking for a piece of Marvin's disordered life, but what follows embroils them all, the wives no less than the husbands. And none of them will ever be the same again.
Westwood captures the heart, right from its opening pages… as an account of what it was like to be an ordinary young woman in wartime London - no stockings, no chocolate, no men - it can hardly be bettered. How did it, I wonder, evade fresh new soft covers for so long?
—— Rachel Cooke , ObserverA wartime masterpiece
—— Evening StandardStella Gibbons is the Jane Austen of the 20th century
—— Lynne TrussGibbons was an acute and witty observer, and her dissection of the British class system is spot-on
—— Mail on SundayYou show up a group of characters, all of whom are discontented and unhappy. Yet the feeling that comes through very powerfully is that life is wonderful, in spite of individual bitterness and frustration.
—— Fan letter , Letter to Stella Gibbons from Henry ParrisA poignant tale about a mother watching her children grow up and marry, and her sadness as they drift further away. Joanna's descriptive writing expresses true wrought emotion and hurt
—— HEAT REVIEWThe author's psychology, as always, is sound, the plotting secure and the pacing brisk and page-turning. Another winner
—— DAILY MAILSociologically and psychologically as observant as ever
—— SPECTATORBook of the Month: An intuitive and sympathetically observed piece of writing
—— GOOD HOUSEKEEPINGTrollope writes with customary compassion and humanity in this heartwarming and engaging novel
—— DAILY EXPRESSA very superior work of women's fiction... an exceedingly skilled analysis of the relationship between different generations of women and how the power shifts as the old, as they must, get old and the young move on... it is a story told beautifully
—— SUNDAY EXPRESSThe legendary Ms Trollope triumphs yet again, with her latest slick of classy chick-lit
—— HEATThis thoroughly engaging, intelligent, literate novel
—— WASHINGTON POSTThe brilliantly observed portrayal of family life is wonderfully compelling - and a story many will be able to identify with. ****
—— CLOSERIncisive, smart and at times darkly funny
—— Gillian McAllisterAstonishingly powerful
—— Nicola MoriartyBrilliantly observed
—— Kathryn Hughes