“Spinster” is the story of Jane, a 23-year old with some serious rejection issues. The origin of her issue isn’t clearly spelled out, but the reader can discern it’s borne during those formative high school years. Jane chose to join a circle of girls she dubbed the “sick seven” not because she liked them, but rather because she wanted to be involved in the activities they had access to. As a result, she had a front row seat to their romantic exploits. Their emotional ups and downs led her to decide she would never be one of those women whose happiness was dependent upon being wanted by a guy. Jane subsequently developed a prickly exterior designed to keep people out. The thing about barriers is they work both ways. Jane successfully kept men at bay, but also kept herself trapped inside. What do you do when you want to go outside the wall, but not look like a hypocrite and risk rejection? In Jane’s case, you use alcohol to cloud the reality of your actions.
The story is told in first person POV with an occasional chapter told from the POV of another character. It’s necessary because Jane tends to drink to the point of blacking out. Without the other narrative the reader would never know what happen during certain pivotal moments in the book. These chapters are clearly labeled so pay attention to the chapter titles.
The book was a steady “C” grade for me from beginning to end. There were noticeable spelling and grammar errors throughout the book that became distracting. According to the author’s notes at the end, the same person read the book ten times in all its draft forms. That’s great if you only want someone to judge content, but once you read something that many times you become too close to it. You start to skim rather than read and that’s how errors like “shaking their grove thing” and the “desert section” of a menu make it into a published product. Spell check doesn’t know everything.
I thought Jane’s transformation was a little unbelievable given her history. Towards the latter part of the book she’s plunged into a social situation that would have a normal well-adjusted person experiencing anxiety of epic proportions. Jane handles it with grace, charm and aplomb. It seemed out of character for someone that introverted.