To the outside world Tom and Ella Barclay have everything, two beautiful children, a lovely home, great jobs and, of course, each other. But after fifteen years the lines of communication have become blurred and with fortieth birthdays not quite as far away as they’d like, both are wondering if life might not have more to offer.
Daniel Blythe was born in Maidstone and educated at Maidstone Grammar School and St John’s College, Oxford. He is the author of three Doctor Who novels including Autonomy, as well as the novels The Cut, Losing Faith and This Is The Day. He has also written the non-fiction books The Encyclopaedia Of Classic 80s Pop, I Hate Christmas: A Manifesto for the Modern-Day Scrooge, Dadlands: The Alternative Handbook For New Fathers, the irreverent politics primer X Marks The Box and the collectors' guide Collecting Gadgets and Games from the 1950s-90s. In 2012, Chicken House published his book for younger readers, Shadow Runners. His Emerald Greene books for younger readers are also out now. Daniel now lives in Yorkshire, on the edge of the Peak District, with his wife and two children.
I'm typically ok with realistic stories - unsatisfied marriages looking elsewhere, the letdown of realizing what married life is, etc. This can often turn into books of men behaving badly, with my favorite example being Nick Hornsby's books and the movie adaptations of them. Humor helps - which is lacking here.
While the writing is decent, this book is repetitive which slows it down. There are only so many times you can read about the lead character wanting to cheat on his wife and discussing it with his best friend. I hit that limit at about 22% and DNF'ed. The book to that point was full of poor (or nonexistent) communication between the spouses as well as other characters, which stretched to the point of needless drama.
I like a bit of 'bloke-lit' at times - I've read and enjoyed numerous novels by the likes of Tony Parsons, Nick Hornby, Mike Gayle, John O'Farrell etc. - and this one started encouragingly in the same kind of genre as some of those. I was, however, a little let down in the end.
It's difficult to pin-point why, but I think it came from the book being a little too long (quick to read each page, but 500+ pages of the same sort of stuff was a bit of a trudge) being a little too ambitious (it covered almost every sphere of family relationships, love, loss, parents, social commentary, men, women, and so on and so on) and not having enough humour to counteract the starkness and grimness of some of the issues covered.
It started off as a tale about a man who starts to feel a little jaded with married life, and the first third of the book was relatively light and relatively funny on this subject. Somewhere round the middle, however, the novel shifted in tone and became a slightly heavy-handed story about a woman and her change in circumstances. The final part was somewhat confused and a little cheesy in truth - reliant on coincidences and 'deus ex machina' to tie things together. Many of the characters seemed to be introduced, fleshed out briefly, then forgotten about until they were 'needed' at some later point to reappear and affect the narrative. As easy a read as it was in many ways, it was flabby with tangents and side-tracking, and I think it would maybe have been better as a stripped-down simpler novel of 300ish pages.
Awful, struggled to get into this book, so boring no proper storyline, has not grabbed me at all, certainly not a cant put this book down. Its basically a happily married family man spending time in the pub being egged on by his mate Jeff to sleep with anything that moves. Really persevered to page 130, but such a struggle had to give up, hate doing that, but there are so many other cracking books by better author's that I want to read, therefore cant waste any more time on this book that's not going anywhere for me.
This is the first book I've read in a while that I actually enjoyed. For me it was very realistic, although some of the things mentioned in Parkfield, eg dropping a washing machine out of a window, seemed a little over the top to me but that just made it humorous. Although nothing major happened I still felt drawn in. It is a fairly large book at 526 pages but I managed to get through it in about three days and enjoyed each and every part of it.
Bitter story of a broken relationship. Witness how an “almost perfect” marriage got shattered through blurred communication and infidelities. Sad how sometimes, you thought you both had it all but still chose to not be contented with what you currently have up to the extent of risking your own relationship.
I liked the way this story was told from both the male and female perspective. However, the characters were a little bit 2 dimensional but made a light and easy read.