I enjoyed reading this. It's short, just 158 pages, and you can tell that Garner honed in on what she wanted to do with these characters, no explanations, just straight into the family set up of Athena and Dexter, and their two children, and then the second, sort-of-couple Elizabeth and Philip, along with Poppy. Poppy is Philip's teenage daughter, and another teenager, Vicki, who is Elizabeth's younger sister by about 20 years.
What I didn't like is that the plot is so entirely predictable, and clearly from an earlier phase of Garner's life, when sex was still a big deal - as it always is with both young and young couples, here I mean young as in 40s with children. Yes, it's still a big deal - and it seems to drive most of the plot. So I found other details more interesting. For example, Athena's waspish comment about her son, Billy who is very autistic. He never speaks, only makes strange, musical whining noises which turn into screams when he is disturbed by sirens or by a low-pressure thunder storm. Vicki asks Athena:
'Why won't he ever look at me?'
'Don't bother to get romantic,' said Athena. 'There's nobody in there.'
And a sentence later, Elizabeth, who is Dexter's friend from uni, and Vicki's older sister speaks to Athena:
How do you bear it?' She said.
'Bear it?' Was this one of Elizabeth's dramatic exclamations, or did she really want to know? 'I've abandoned him, in my heart,' said Athena. 'It's work. I'm just hanging on till we can get rid of him.'
'Get rid of him?' said Elizabeth.
Athena's small, calm smile did not alter. 'The thought of it,' she said in her civilised voice, 'the very thought of it is like a dark cloud rolling away.'
'There might be a place for him, in a year or so,' said Dexter. He stood up and stretched his limbs. 'You know, sometimes he screams all day.'
'Dex is still romantic about him,' said Athena.
That conversation allows us to understand that this is not "the perfect family" as the blurb on the front cover indicates by David Nicholls, but there again, he's a man, and has probably never ironed a table-cloth, or entertained a disabled child either. The strain on the marriage which is not clear initially is unravelled with ethereal, dreamy comments on Athena, after she meets Philip. Elizabeth does nothing to intervene indicating Philip cannot help but wander, and makes a comment on the grisly world of singles, especially the music/ entertainment world Philip is in. Elizabeth has something similar career-wise, but it is never defined; it's enough that Vicki deflects from her sister's concrete loft apartment to the warmer vibe of the Fox home in the suburbs, Melbourne.
I liked especially all the domestic details, the fact especially that when Athena returns, sorry if you think this is a spoiler, she cleans the house. Only Athena knows how the washing machine works, or what to do with the pile of pizza boxes folded and dumped near the bin etc. Garner points out that the home has been waiting for her return, because until then, nothing feels good. There are so many small details of place, of space, of environment; when Vicki takes a shower in her sister's flat, there is a gum tree immediately outside the fire-escape door, which she opens and the harsh metallic leaves spring into her face, one cutting directly into her eye. The concrete steps leading down to the garden are hot, even early in the morning. When Athena sits on her front steps she notices the windows of the house opposite reflect the passage of cars and people not of the street in front, but one some half-mile away over the creek, so she sees that the windows are angled and not straight as she has always thought. Details, small, small details, but completely absorbing and real.