Joanna Trollope is a wonderful writer whose metier is family relationships. Her characters and situations always seem very true to life - and very British - and though there are no fast paced plots, there is plenty of tension to drive the story. As the mother of two sons, one married and one about to be, I found this story centered around the relationship of the mother of three grown sons with her daughters-in-law to be highly relatable. The story is told from multiple points of view, so the reader experiences the relationships from various sides. The mother Rachel, a talented cook, and her successful artist husband Anthony live in the family's old home in Suffolk, where they enjoy having the children and grandchildren at the center of their lives. But two of the sons now live in London and the youngest, Luke, has recently married, and his beautiful but spoiled young wife Charlotte doesn't see the need to follow along with the expected weekends in Suffolk. A financial crisis threatens another son's marriage as well as his relationship with his brothers. Rachel, like any mother, wants to ensure her children's happiness and tries to arrange things to ease their path. Her son Luke's mother-in-law also attempts to help out. But when does a mother's help begin to be interfering and how will the son or daughter react? How best can you keep your children close without being intrusive and while allowing their independence? And how do you shift the epicenter of your life once the children have left? Rachel is resisting the changes to her ideal life and, though she doesn't admit it, resents the pull away from her exerted by the daughters-in-law. She doesn't like sharing her sons with another family, which is one reason why she favors her daughter-in-law Petra who has no other family, and whom she virtually hand-picked for her difficult middle son Ralph. Petra, who first came to the household as a talented student of Anthony's, is the odd duck, quiet and unconventional, and begins to chafe under the expectations of both her husband and his family. Rachel, impulsive, tactless and aggravated by circumstances not of her liking, manages to offend her new daughter-in-law Charlotte with an unforgivable remark. All of the family is appalled, and Charlotte tries to nurse the grievance for sympathy. Will this drive a further wedge between family members? Will the daughters-in-law come to appreciate their mother-in-law and her part in raising their husbands? Family dynamics eddy and shift, and all come to realize that things are always changing and it is up to each of them to adapt and choose their own happiness.
I enjoyed this book even though I felt annoyance with Rachel's selfishness and tactlessness while understanding her motives. The middle son Ralph was not likable, and I didn't feel that Trollope adequately conveyed his unconventionality and his lack of sociability, though she is frequently telling the reader that's how he is. At one point she says his lack of connectedness was almost autistic, but it was hardly that, and how did he manage to be so successful in the world of banking and finance if that was his handicap? However, he does seem self-centered and oblivious to the feelings of others, rather like his mother. Petra is the other cipher. She is the quiet observer who lived so much in her head, and we're given so little of her thoughts. I would have liked to have learned more about her. I rather liked her defiant stubbornness and her knowledge of what she needed to be true to herself, and that she was wonderfully attuned to her young children. However, I wasn't convinced of her feelings for Ralph - perhaps they were ambivalent? I also found it interesting that the eldest son Edward married a woman as emotionally contained as his mother was not. I felt the resolution was a little hurried and convenient. All in all, Trollope's treatment of the characters and the push and pull of their relationships is insightful and interesting and lead the reader to consider the dynamics of her own.