You can tell I'm in a reading slump as it took me 1 week!!! to finish this novel. True, I've been doing other stuff, and I seem to have gotten back my photography mojo, which had pretty much deserted me in the past year or so. Right, back to the subject at hand, 'Hester and Harriet'.
First of all, I felt like such a dufus for assuming that Hester was a guy's name. Hester and Harriet are two widowed, retired sisters, living a quiet and comfortable life in a village in England. Their life is uneventful and has been like that for many years. All they've got is each other, as none of them had children.
But all this coziness turns on its head when, on Christmas Day, they come across a very young foreign woman with a baby, hiding in a disused bus shelter. Upon realising she had nowhere to go, they take it upon themselves to offer to give them shelter in their home. As if they didn't have enough to deal with, their fifteen-year-old nephew, Ben, shows at their door seeking sanctuary from his overbearing, well-intentioned parents.
And so, they were two, but now they are five. The sisters are puzzled by Daria. They come to discover that she's from Belarus, and they are ashamed that they don't know much about that country. But they have the best intentions where Daria and her adorable baby, Milo, are concerned. As for the nephew, grunty, pimply, attached-to-his-mobile phone Ben, they're not that keen on him, but they don't have the heart to renege on their sanctuary.
Of course, things become more complicated. Some bad guys come into the picture. Is Daria who she says she is? Now the sisters embark on finding out if Daria told the truth, and how to help her stay in the UK. I'll leave it at that as I already said too much. You can think of the two sisters are Ms Marple x 2, but in more contemporary British setting.
'Hester and Harriet' is a delightful novel. There were so many things that I liked about it.
It was refreshing to have heroines who are past their prime. I love it when ordinary people become heroes through circumstance and/or through their actions.
The writing is really good and has a great flow. It's detail oriented, but I didn't mind it. Also, the vocabulary used is elevated, nothing to be scared of, I needed to use the Dictionary a few times, but as I said it before, I enjoy learning so I appreciated the opportunity. I loved how both sisters were correcting Ben's grammar incessantly.
I thought Hillary Spiers did a great job at presenting one of the issues Britain grapples with these days - immigration. One can have set ideas about what/how things are or should be but "... how the sands shift once matters become personal. At a remove, there would be no doubt as to the correct course of action. Now, however, those certainties have been shaken by events, of greater significance, by their growing attachment to Daria and Milo."
I'll close my review by saying that 'Hester and Harriet' is a novel that accomplishes being fun yet serious, irreverent, sardonic yet touching, with a good dose of realism. The character development was absolutely fantastic.
Here's to unlikely heros and heroines!
4 stars
Cover: 4.5 stars