I really enjoyed this novel, and think it's quite brilliant, despite a few flaws. it felt, above everything, a kind of coming of age novel - the transition from childhood into early adulthood.
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it has a slow, gentle start... the house containing a couple generations of women, and a generous handful of adopted/foster children... the day starting, but not quite as usual...
"this didn't belong to the world she knew, this was nightmare".
I really like the household led by women, and the perspectives that brings, the way they approach the situation.... 🙂
an absent father and son, appears by telephone every now and again 😉 and is pretty absent even when he's briefly there in person 😆
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I liked the exploration of adult and children's reactions and different understandings...
adult responsibility for children's actions...
adjustment to death... to taking a part in it...
trauma, especially the trauma that children carry...
in moments, the novel made me think to JG Ballard's writing, especially 'Empire of the Sun'.
I wondered about when each of these two authors were living and writing, wrt any shared experiences and impacts of their times... 🤔
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and now the possibly of the UK as one large tourist attraction... 🤣
(also made me think of how there's some romanticism of the UK by some of/in the USA)
I found alot of subtle/wry humour in the novel 🙂😁
as well as a sensitive approach.
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there's a fair bit of internal monologue, used to expose the characters feelings under the surface of what's overtly going on... used to enhance the complexities and ironies of the situations. I also think it contributes to the humour 🙂
and the novel features alot about acting and performance 🙂 with the grandmother matriarch of the family (Mads) having made her career on stage, and the villagers supposed submission/compliance with the US invasion of UK being a performance, and how the young women have to manage the unwanted interests of the men/US soldiers, feigning interest up to a point...
"he squeezed her arm, she prayed for patience and for courage too..."
tho this latter does bring in both the position women were/are frequently placed in wrt unwanted male interest, and how sometimes survival depends on feigned interest and a degree of compliance, and the balance is precarious.
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I liked the delicacy observed around the dignity of the beachcomber 🙂 tho I was mildly troubled by the nicknaming of him (both for the class, and English, entitlement).
I enjoyed the easy alliance between the Cornish and the Welsh, Celtic allies against the English 😃
there was later mention of both Wales and Scotland giving more resistance to USUK, civil disobedience, striking... 😃
and I enjoyed 'Taffy' picking up Welsh broadcasts about what's going on... and contributing in Welsh and Cornish. I enjoyed that Welsh and Cornish were used as languages of subversion and resistance 😁 I also liked the presentation of the lesser known Cornish nationalist movement (lesser known compared to the Welsh and Scottish, tho I think generally absent from alot of English awareness).
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I enjoyed how the narrator was increasingly the young woman Emma, and/or she became increasingly solid as a character.
I don't know much about the authors life to know who she could represent 🤔 it felt like she could be an aspect of herself? 🤔
also Mad and Dotty as women's names - this had to be deliberate wrt how women and their opinions are treated/viewed 😆
and Vic (Victor, the winner) the father is well drawn as completely entitled and opinioned, expecting the world to revolve around him and his ideas/opinions 🙄
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I thought the novel was interestingly prescient - brexit, it's economic consequences, xenophobia...
and the particular Christianity of some states of the USA being brought into school lessons...
rationing, and hoarding...
"..and although all the toilet rolls will come in handy, you can't eat them can you" 😉
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the novel is not without faults - I think it's very much of its time, and/or the preceding time - some of the gendered norms and racism. while at the same time it's likely broaching subjects (women led households, mixed race families) that weren't readily done at the time, in a kinda subtle roundabout way. possibly what is subtle and not enough now, was more explicit and quite alot for the time it was written? 🤔
there were also definite class divisions that for a long time weren't directly critiqued, tho were hinted at, with the narrating household being more affluent and connected and at least upper middle class at a guess. tho later in the novel there was abit more obvious class related conversation 🙂
politically I thought there were some socialist politics in places too, a nice sense of community spirit and mutual support, as well as the rising up of the Celtic nations (Kernow/Cornwall included) 😁
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the ending... everything kinda goes back to normal and yet is forever changed. an indescribable sense of pathos, and a real mix of emotions - a child with confident adult awareness, siblings reunited but interacting differently, the pigeon being let go... 💔♥
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accessed as an RNIB talking book, pretty unevenly read by Micheal De Morgan (whose American accent isn't especially good, and his Welsh accent was as bad 😬)