Home on Folly Farm, The perfect uplifting romantic comedy for 2021, Jane Lovering
Review from Jeannie Zelos book reviews
Genre: Women's Fiction, General Fiction (Adult)
I love Jane's books. On the surface they're a cute, HEA story but when you get into them there is so much more. This one is set in rural Yorkshire, small sheep farm, and was so well described I felt I was there, alongside the characters. It covers so much, teen pregnancy, depression, drug taking, coping with the loss of children, so many interwoven subjects, and all handled sensitively, and in such a way that they don't drag the story down, don't depress the reader but made me want to know more about the characters. And it's full of quiet, subtle humour like this “ a bit like being haunted by Reebok” in relation to Thor and his trainers....you have to look for some of it or you'll miss is, its so cleverly done.
I loved Dora – but then we're seeing her via her own voice, so of course events are skewed to her perspective. I hated Cass to begin, in fact for the greater part of the novel, but again as we see at the end I'm viewing her through Dora's perspective, not exactly unbiased. Nat, lovely, lovely Nat, quiet but firm, brilliant tutor, and not just to Thor. And of course that brings me to Thor, who was a fabulous character. I loved seeing his transformation from sullen, bored, preteen to excitable, normal twelve year old boy.
The sheep rustling scene is one that will stay with me, Thor and his Vlog followers, gang of teens dragging their parents out of bed at 4am for an adventure, and to rescue web famous lambs Flick and Knife – yep, Thor named them. I had tears running down my face, had to keep rereading as the words blurred, it was hysterically funny.
I hate when a book promises “ you will laugh out loud” because I find that rarely delivers, but this scene, well, it was just what I needed in these grim Covid days. An unexpected bonus.
Its a fabulous story, with so much real life packed in, so much abut human psyche, how we react to others, become whats expected. By the end I felt I really understood the characters, and could see events with a different eye. The same things happened, the same results, but the characters weren't the dislikable, selfish ones I thought, but had reasons for acting that way and when Dora understood that it really improved her life and relationships too. The months on the farm transformed all of them, they all ended in a better place.
Stars: Five, a gem of a read, Jane's wonderful writing, delivering another perfect story, pathos and humour, love and disasters, all in one great novel.
Arc via Netgalley and publishers