The Secret Life of Albert Entwistle by Matt Cain
Synopsis /
Albert Entwistle is a private man with a quiet, simple life. He lives alone with his cat Gracie. And he’s a postman. At least he was a postman until, three months before his sixty-fifth birthday, he receives a letter from the Royal Mail thanking him for decades of service and stating he is being forced into retirement.
At once, Albert’s sole connection with his world unravels. Every day as a mail carrier, he would make his way through the streets of his small English town, delivering letters and parcels and returning greetings with a quick wave and a “how do?” Without the work that fills his days, what will be the point? He has no friends, family, or hobbies—just a past he never speaks of, and a lost love that fills him with regret.
And so, rather than continue his lonely existence, Albert forms a brave plan to start truly living. It’s finally time to be honest about who he is. To seek the happiness he’s always denied himself. And to find the courage to look for George, the man that, many years ago, he loved and lost—but has never forgotten. As he does, something extraordinary happens. Albert finds unlikely allies, new friends, and proves it’s never too late to live, to hope, and to love.
My Thoughts /
4.5 stars
I picked this one up at the library after seeing the lovely cover and reading the book blurb. I thought it was going to be a story about a man who, after spending his entire life being a postman, a job he loved; was going to be retired by the Royal Mail Postal Service on his upcoming birthday - I was thinking that this 'secret life' was going to be Albert continuing his postal duties in secret after his retirement. Boy was I wrong!
In Matt Cain's The Secret Life of Albert Entwistle, the author catalogues the life of sixty-four-year-old, Albert Entwistle. Cain writes with a steady, easygoing, and relaxed pace. The story alternates between Albert's memories of his younger years and the present day. There's no mistaking, that present day Albert is shy and socially awkward. He lives alone in the house he grew up in, with only Gracie, his cat, for company. As he's aged, Albert has morphed into someone who craves routine and privacy, preferring to live a quiet solitary life. But Albert’s world is turned upside down on the day he receives a letter from his employer, in which it is written that upon his sixty-fifth birthday he will be summarily dismissed from the Royal Mail Postal Service - as the mandatory age for retirement is sixty-five. And that date is only three short months away. How will Albert fill his days if he has no job anymore?
This event was the catalyst to Albert's budding new growth and eventual bloom - because Albert has lived his whole life in the closet, metaphorically speaking. The reasons for this are not clear in the beginning, but Cain lets them bloom, along with Albert's personality, as the story progresses.
Is change best when it is forced upon us? Albert, with nothing to lose because his whole world is upending, hatches a plan that will change his life. When you are no longer able to change a situation, you are then challenged to change yourself. But change, although possible, is never easy. So, on the eve of his sixty-fifth birthday, Albert decides it's finally time to be honest about who he is, and to find the happiness in his life that he deserves but that he always denied himself. And the happiness Albert is referring to is George Atkinson.
As teenagers, Albert fell heart and soul over his openly gay best friend. You must remember, that during the sixties and seventies, being homosexual was illegal and subjected a person to hate shaming and bigotry and worse. So, Albert and George would meet in secret where they lived out their best days as teenage boys, who had done nothing wrong, except love each other. But that idyllic world imploded when Albert's father, who was deeply homophobic, surprised the boys at their favourite meeting place and made Albert promise never to see George again.
Now sixty-five and being forced into retirement from a job he's held all his life, Albert decides it's finally time to truly start living. Gathering up the courage he didn't know he had, Albert begins a search to find George - the boy he loved with his whole heart and has never forgotten. Cain writes Albert's journey of courage from here like the opening of a budded flower. Albert, in his journey to find his one lost love, finds love and acceptance of himself; he finds friends and allies in unlikely places and knowledge that the world has changed enough so that he can embrace being the person he wants to be.
Cain's characterisations are beautifully written and thought out. They are interesting, fleshed out, and vivid people who would be a joy to have in your life.
It saddens me when I hear that someone has lived their life in 'secret' for fear of being branded something other than which they are - human.
Be the change you wish to see in the world.
— Mahatma Gandhi