Skip to main content

Featured

Coming Home to Maple Lodge by Alison Sherlock #Review

  I am delighted to feature the first in Alison Sherlock's new series set in the Corswolds. Coming Home to Maple Tree Lodge was published by Boldwood Books on June 20th. A family and hotel in desperate need of help… Maple Tree Lodge has been the home of the Jackson family for over a century. But the hotel has never been a success and, following the sudden loss of his father, architect Ben Jackson soon discovers the hotel is close to financial ruin. Ben has to make some tough decisions if the hotel is to survive and his family are to keep a roof over their heads. With the hotel in urgent need of a renovation, Ben’s sister calls on the talents of her best friend, interior designer Lily Watson. Cash strapped Lily needs a successful project to prove to herself and her high-achieving parents that she can carve a successful career and Maple Tree Lodge sounds like just the place for Lily to showcase her talents. However, Lily’s vision for a cosy, country Cotswolds hotel is the com...

The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield







Published in 2006, The Thirteenth Tale was Diane Setterfield’s debut novel. It is an atmospheric mystery, packed with gothic features and is a huge nod to the likes of Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights. The complicated plot kept me reading and guessing as to where it was going to take me. The novel is filled with secrets and ghostly allusions. Its setting is mainly an old, gloomy mansion, Angelfield House, now destroyed by fire, which was suitably crumbling and decaying even when inhabited.  It is a novel which explores self and individuality, twins and siblings, family relationships, separation and apartness. There are corrosive past secrets, abandonments and hints of incest. You also consider what is meant by normal behaviour and what constitutes madness.

Margaret  Lea, brought up in her father’s antiquarian bookshop, prefers the written word to dealing with people in person. As a small child, she learnt the truth that she had had a conjoined twin who died. All her life she has sensed the presence of her sister and glimpses her in mirrors, windows and reflections. Her relationship with her mother has always been complicated. Margaret, now an adult, is a biographer who receives a written invitation from the famous author, Vida Winter, who wishes to tell her the ‘truth’ about her life after years of storytelling. Margaret cannot resist the chance to find the elusive ‘Thirteenth Tale’ which was never published. She is also drawn in by Vida’s reference to twins in Vida’s story. 

Full of twists and turns, the story has an interesting narrative structure. Two stories are interwoven - Vida’s and Margaret’s. For the most part, Vida’s account of past happenings is in the third person but at a point in the story, after Charlie, her uncle, disappears, Vida’s account switches to the first person. In the main, it is Margaret who unravels the story and we follow it through her eyes. We also read Hester, the governess’ diary and Vida’s letter.

In addition to the narrative, this is a book about writing and the effect of the written words on an individual. There are many features which echo Jane Eyre, a novel which is explicitly mentioned. The spirits outside Vida’s house, set a remote part of Yorkshire, is reminiscent of Wuthering Heights. There is a parallel with Henry James’ The Turn of the Screw, which centres around a governess and her two charges who appear aware of ghostly figures outside their remote home. 

I found it to be the sort of book which I enjoyed but not over enthusiastically so. However, after I had put it down, it did not really leave me. It is a story you find yourself thinking about.

In short: it is a book which would repay rereading as there is such a level of detail within the story and so many connections to unravel.


Comments

Popular Posts