It sounds like a cliché but Flick Merauld's novel, `The Aunt Sally Team', does work at many different levels. The title and cover suggest a light-hearted, humorous tale about an ill-assorted band of characters in an obscure corner of English parochial life and readers who are expecting that will not be disappointed. It is, however, far far more than that. Each of the players who reluctantly come together to form the Aunt Sally Team at the George and Dragon pub in Oxford is, either by fate, family pressures or their own inner devils, caught within one of those little bubbles of loneliness and isolation we all recognise as such a prevalent feature of modern life. Each has their own story to tell and those stories, through the agency of the Team, become intertwined and inseparable - no small feat for a writer but one which Flick Merauld pulls off effortlessly. The novel is at times poignant, at times hilarious, always riveting and imbued with a quiet and compassionate wit and razor-sharp eye for the great human story as it affects both men and women, young and old. The characters are brilliantly drawn, highly individual yet recognisable and the descriptive passages of the countryside and quiet textures of English life are pure poetry. Each story is played out and resolved satisfyingly yet there is no 'happily ever after' ending, any more than there is in life. Nonetheless, when I got to the end of this book, I not only felt I'd had a great read but also felt pretty okay about being human. Get it.