I've read quite a few Elizabeth Edmondson novels now, and I have to say this is my favorite. There are some issues other readers have had, one being the number of characters, and I have to agree I had a bit of a struggle to keep up with who was who, and could have done with a character list or a couple of family trees to help out in that department, but the characterization, on the other hand, and the characters themselves, held me spellbound. I had to know how this story turned out for those characters I became most attached to, and there were several of them.
It's 1936 in the Lake District of England. Two well-to-do families have lived across this lake from one another for generations, and have formed some bonds of friendship in the past, the latest between teenagers, and young adults. But there are some strained relationships too, some of the most strained between family members, parents and their children, grandparents and their children and grandchildren. A few villains fill out the character list, and it does seem at the start of the story to be quite a jar of pickles to sort out.
By the end of the story, which kept me intrigued and turning pages, even when I was a little confused, a couple of major mysteries were solved, and I came away quite satisfied, except for a desire to follow some of these characters into their future lives. This is not an action story, it's more a relationship story, and a pre-war story, because the threat of war is almost a character in itself here. I am grateful to have read this novel, which I suspect might be the late author's best work.