After an unemployed man is incapacitated by his wife's death, his children, to avoid state care, take over the house and the housekeeping, but their charade is threatened by the discovery of the body of Dad's nosy ex-girlfriend in their own backyard.
Robert Barnard (born 23 November 1936) was an English crime writer, critic and lecturer.
Born in Essex, Barnard was educated at the Royal Grammar School in Colchester and at Balliol College in Oxford. His first crime novel, A Little Local Murder, was published in 1976. The novel was written while he was a lecturer at University of Tromsø in Norway. He has gone on to write more than 40 other books and numerous short stories.
Barnard has said that his favourite crime writer is Agatha Christie. In 1980 he published a critique of her work titled A Talent to Deceive: An Appreciation of Agatha Christie.
Barnard was awarded the Cartier Diamond Dagger in 2003 by the Crime Writers Association for a lifetime of achievement.
Under the pseudonym Bernard Bastable, Robert Barnard has published one standalone novel and three alternate history books starring Wolfgang Mozart as a detective, he having survived to old age.
The beginning of this book was a little, I don't know the word, hokey, I guess. I didn't think I would even finish it. I'm glad I did though! Turned out to be a pretty decent read. A little unbelievable behavior now and then from kids but a nice little puzzle and view into human nature.
I didn't know what to expect from this book. I hadn't read this author before and it was also written more than 25 years ago! (Like I wasn't sure if there was child abuse, incest, etc.) It's pretty PG - after a woman dies in childbirth, the husband is pretty much just comatose. The two oldest kids of the four (I think Matthew and Annie are 12 and 13) decide they don't want to be separated from their father, home or each other so they pretend their dad is okay and handle the food shopping, school drop-offs and keeping up a front to the community.
I'm glad I read this, and the little peeks into the future are interesting because you don't know what happens to bring all four kids, now all grown, back to Calverley Row.
Since Barnard's death in later 2013, I have been revisiting his remarkable output and frankly discovering nuances that now in retrospect seem prescient in view of the hateful and rapid dementia that ultimately claimed his life.
Masters of the House spins a vivid and heartfelt account of a family trying to cope with a desperate emergency and the resulting social pressures. Barnard starts his tale by engaging our curiosity over how long the children will be able to avoid their fears of going into 'care', but then despite a few well-placed flash forward scenes which reassure us all went well, far more sinister events reveals greater threats to their security. Even so, from the children's viewpoint and of that era everything they do at the time makes sense.
But through today's eyes, this plot also reveals the assumed horrors associated with mental illness ...stigma that has haunted society for far too long and which we are just now beginning to break down in order to re-configure more appropriate, sensitive and sensible responses both practical and personal.
So while MofH stands up well as a fascinating and hugely entertaining tale of mystery, (and entertainment was Barnard's self-proclaimed Prime Directive) which leads into avenues of coping and discovery, I also now suspect the final sentence reveals a deeper and more visceral fear which I hope such a mentally agile and versatile author had been spared at his own end.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
An interesting crime novel which begins with the death of Eileen Heenan. However, the plot go far beyond her family trying to deal with her death. The effects of her death on her family are the main focus of the book. Her husband loses his sanity, leaving the day-to-day chores of caring for the family and the home, as well as their ill father, to the two eldest children, Annie and Matthew (11 and 13). They know that if the authorities find out that their father is incapacitated, the children will be removed from the home and put into government care. They do a good job of keeping the truth from the priest, their mother's friends,a and their father's drinking buddies. It's going smoothly until a woman named Carmen turns up. Having been in a relationship with the children's father, she becomes suspicious when he disappears from sight. One night the children find her dead body in their back yard. Again, they have an important decision to make. the novel's twists and turns are all plausible and the characters feel like real people. I read this novel quickly 'cos I wanted to know what would happen. I was totally invested in the story.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Robert Barnard is very good at getting inside the minds of youngsters. In this case, it's Matthew and Annie Heenan, whose mother has died in childbirth and whose father is going out of his mind with grief and guilt. Although the two siblings don't quite understand what's going on with their father, they do know that they are at risk of being taken into care, so they shoulder the burden of caring for their younger siblings, the household, and the finances. These are two very clever but believable children, and the reader will be rooting for them throughout, especially when they have to decide what to do with the body they have found in their back garden.
I approached this book with a few doubts. The premise didn't grab me at first, but it turned into a most excellent read, cleverly conceived and defyly written. I suspected correctly who done it, but I remained unsure for a major part of the book. This is one to read again, in a few years.