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Bookish John Cole, aloof and alone in middle age, walks out of his life on the thirty-first day without rain. Making his way to the Norfolk coast, his car breaks down in the punishing heat. Abandoning it on an isolated road, he comes to a solitary house whose residents welcome him in.
But there's more to this curious community hidden in the Thetford pines than meets the eye: his hosts all know him by name. They've prepared a room for him, and claim to have been waiting for him all along…
" ... unsettling and beguiling, and beautifully lyrical, this stunning literary debut marks Sarah Perry as a terrifically talented novelist of the very highest calibre." - John Burnside, The Guardian.
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I can see why this book would divide opinion. It's a strange, claustrophobic tale with Gothic elements and reads like a fever dream. Not for everyone then.
It opens on the 30th day of a baking hot drought and a man closing up his bookshop, which no-one ever visits, and driving off....where? Even he doesn't know. Eventually he abandons the car at the edge of a wood and walks on to discover a house, a large house full of strangers who all seem to be expecting him, or at least someone with the same name.
So begins a story of mistaken identity, of strange atmosphere and oppressive summer days. The cast of characters are ex inmates of some retreat or asylum, but they aren't ill, just disturbed or broken in some way. Hester, the old woman who has a hidden longing and other secrets. Alex the broken, fragile youth. His porcelain skinned sister, Clare. The sensual piano player, Eve. The lapsed agoraphobic preacher, Elijah; and Walker, the accountant who has some kind of relationship with Eve.
Into all this walks the man, John Cole, and he finds himself increasingly entangled in their lives. Over the course of the week he keeps a journal or else it would all seem unreal, a dream.
For a first novel this is extraordinarily confident. The self-contained narrative has a dream-like quality that is unsettling and compelling at the same time. Water is a constant - the threat of the coming storm to break the drought; the reservoir at the end of the garden which draws Alex to it time and again. The seaside trip, the sweat that drenches them all.
If, in the end, the resolution is rushed, and loose ends left dangling, well...dreams do that. It's not a book for everyone but I enjoyed it.
I'm really not sure what to make of it. It's very strange and confusing, but also beautifully written and somewhat Gothic. I just haven't yet figured out what it's about, I guess. Might revise this rating later.
The blurb is a little misleading, promising more sinister action than ever takes place. Despite this, it is worth a read. Charming in it's simplicity. It is a page-turner borne out of curiosity as opposed to excitement although the ending seems a little weak.I can see why it was longlisted for the Guardian's First Book Award and I can also see why it didn't win. It is expertly written and still, it has room to evolve yet hasn't. It is an excellent exercise in character building and the slow reveal of different facets of each of the protagonists.Swapping the voice between an omniscient narrator and John diarising his experiences gives the reader a bit of a change and allows different characters to be explored in other ways.I definitely liked the book, and enjoyed it, though as I have said it has some space to develop further that I would like to have seen. I would consider reading another [a:Sarah Perry 480401 Sarah Perry https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-632230dc9882b4352d753eedf9396530.png] novel in the future if it piqued my interest.
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