I won this at the end of last year on the goodreads giveaways. Nicci Gerrard is actually half of Nicci French, who writes thrillers (I think I read one of those a few years ago...). Anyway, this book is quite different in tone to the thrillers.
Eleanor Lee (nee Wright) is a very old and virtually blind lady. After an accident she agrees with her family that she can no longer live alone in her country home, and will move into a home after her birthday. In the meantime she hires a young man, Peter, to go through all of her papers, letters, books, photographs etc to sort through what should be kept, thrown out etc. She wants a stranger to do this job, not family. Partly this is because there are a few letters none of the family know about - Eleanor's private life from her youth - that she wants to be found and destroyed. And through these, she shares the story of her younger days with Peter.
The Twilight Hour obviously refers to Eleanor in her last phase of life, reflecting back. So it's got a rather melancholic twinge, not just because she is dying, but because it's looking back over a long life and everything that is now done and finished, lost to the past. I think it's also a reminder that we shouldn't patronise and baby the eldery as if they know nothing of life. Just because they're old now, it doesn't mean they weren't young once.
It's also a reminder that life isn't easy, doesn't run smoothly and we don't always get what we want. I really liked Eleanor, she was brave enough to face up to that fact and the fact that life keeps on moving no matter what. In contrast, her younger step sister, Merry, never wanted to accept reality and ended up as this rather insipid doll princess that has just skipped out of the playroom. With occasional flashes of self absorbed viciousness. I suppose you have to pity her, because in clinging to these fantasies and not leaving fairybook land, she never got to live a real life. Still, there are lots of Merrys out there.
Light but pleasant reading, with sadness, so perhaps not one to read if you're feeling blue.