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400 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1997

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195 people want to read

About the author

Deborah Moggach

50 books570 followers
Deborah Moggach is a British writer, born Deborah Hough on 28 June 1948. She has written fifteen novels to date, including The Ex-Wives, Tulip Fever, and, most recently, These Foolish Things. She has adapted many of her novels as TV dramas and has also written several film scripts, including the BAFTA-nominated screenplay for Pride & Prejudice. She has also written two collections of short stories and a stage play. In February 2005, Moggach was awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters degree by her Alma Mater, the University of Bristol . She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, a former Chair of the Society of Authors, and is on the executive committee of PEN.

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5 stars
202 (32%)
4 stars
211 (34%)
3 stars
148 (23%)
2 stars
44 (7%)
1 star
14 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews
Profile Image for Anni.
558 reviews92 followers
September 2, 2024
A complex family saga across three generations, with marriages and relationships collapsing like dominos - you will need your wits about you to remember who’s who and with whom. However, fear not - Deborah Moggach is a consummate story teller who you can rely on to keep all the balls in the air and catch them at the end. I must add a word of caution for those who are easily shocked when it comes to explicit sexual content - this is the raunchiest description of sex from the female aspect that I’ve ever encountered!
Profile Image for Connie53.
1,233 reviews3 followers
July 21, 2020
Ooit in een ver verleden gekocht naar aanleiding van de tv-serie die van dit boek is gemaakt. Een ingewikkeld familie verhaal. Een ouder echtpaar met 3 volwassen dochters. Een dochter heeft een op het eerste oog volmaakt huwelijk, compleet met een mooi huis en een knappe kinderen. De middelste dochter heeft een affaire met haar getrouwde baas. De jongste dochter keert terug van haar vrijwilligerswerk in Afrika en zo is iedereen weer thuis. Dan krijgt de vader een hartaanval die hij gelukkig overleeft, maar na zijn herstel begint hij aan een relatie met zijn jonge verpleegster April. En dan begint het leven rond de zussen ook te verkruimelen. Hun moeder heeft geen idee wat ze moet doen zonder haar man en dat brengt de zussen bij elkaar om voor hun moeder te zorgen. Goed geschreven, maar een beetje veel drama voor een boek.
Profile Image for Helen Kollin Fichtel.
304 reviews6 followers
September 11, 2014
This started off quite well. The style and setting reminded me more of Joanna Trollope than previous books I've read by this author. it was all quite pleasant and interesting enough, and then...well, it descended into crappy chick-lit territory, with some truly cringe-worthy (and imo inappropriate) sex scenes, plus the story line seemed to consist of everyone breaking up.
The ending scenario was totally unrealistic and smacked of the author just trying to tie up every single loose end in the most clunky way possible.
I believe this was one of the authors earlier novels, and I can only say that she got much, much better with experience.
Profile Image for Jayne Charles.
1,045 reviews22 followers
July 30, 2011
Wow what a terrific read. Hits the ground running with a lively run-down of the family at the centre of the plot, racing through their early years like a rollercoaster ride, hurtling towards the start of the story. That's when the perfect lives of the various family members start to unravel in startling ways. From African violets to lesbianism, it's all in here. Highly recommended if you like a good soapy story with plenty happening, rooted in the real world.
Profile Image for Julia Newton.
17 reviews1 follower
March 14, 2014
I enjoyed this modern family saga with three generations and what happens when the grandfather has a heart attack and then starts a new life. His three daughters' lives are turned upside down although his wife copes better. The grandchildren's stories are also told at first hand, and after a great deal of soul-searching and reinvention, there is a happy outcome.
It made me think about what things are really important in life.
43 reviews1 follower
September 17, 2021
Exhausting

Oh my goodness, what a story, I don't think there was any subject matter that wasn't written about somewhere in it's 300 odd pages, chauvinism, divorce, perverts, lesbians, race, you mention it, it was there! Unhappy family, bickering amongst themselves, while between them they experience the aforementioned, but don't worry, they all live happily ever after - as you do! And clearly the author has never met a real Farrier, because I can assure you, they don't live on run down estates, they make a very good living due to their expertise. Absolute tosh, totally unbelievable, don't know what possessed me to finish the book, I somehow thought it may improve, unfortunately, it got worse.
Profile Image for Cath Murphy.
114 reviews10 followers
October 4, 2011
Accurate and very funny portrait of a family in meltdown. Pater familias Gordon suffers a heart attack and after recovery decides to leave his wife of forty years, Dorothy, for a nurse. His three grown up daughters, Louise, Prudence and Maddy are all also struggling to sustain relationships and at the same time, Louise's two teenage children Imogen and Jamie are just embarking on their first attempts at love.

Moggach is unsentimental, unsparing and yet affectionate towards her characters, even the hopeless and the caddish are treated fairly. The resolution is neat without being pat and you leave the story with the sense that somehow, somewhere they continue to muddle through.
162 reviews
February 8, 2016
Moggach is always a good read. I liked the range of characters and inter-relationships.The 3 daughters and their own relationships plus the way they interacted with their parents. The end was perhaps a bit cosy, but it was nice to have things resolved!
For a book that is fairly contemporary I was struck by what a difference ( in a very short time)mobile phones have made to our lives!
Profile Image for Petrina Binney.
Author 13 books24 followers
April 25, 2020
The story follows Hammond family. Gordon and Dorothy have been married for forty-four years. They have raised a family of three daughters, Louise, Prudence and Maddy, and run a construction business together.

Gordon works too hard. His view of the world is rather narrow, he uses insensitive language partly to annoy his daughters and partly because he knows no better. He rushes around, fixing things, eating fried food, smoking and generally getting stressed, until one day, he has a heart attack. During his convalescence, Gordon’s named nurse is a young black woman called April. As they get to know each other, Gordon rapidly falls in love with April and leaves Dorothy with the shattered remnants of their life together.

Meanwhile, the daughters are not without their own problems. Louise, beautiful and charming, is a wife and mother. Her husband is somewhat distant, staying away for work with some regularity. Her children are teenaged and rather difficult. A lonely man in the village shop has been totally infatuated with her for years, about which, of course, she has no idea.

Prudence, studious and sensible, has been having an affair with a married man, who she works for, for nearly a year. Working at an old publishing house in London, she retreats from thoughts of her boyfriend’s wife by reading multiple manuscripts. Being an unorthodox relationship, at best, Prudence can’t really introduce her superior and boyfriend to her sisters, but spies an opportunity to do so when Erin, a local gardener, thrusts a manuscript into her hands. Prudence begins reading and can’t stop. With the distraction of Erin, enigmatic, charismatic lesbian, at the table, Prudence can rely on Maddy, recently returned from charity work in Africa, a hardy, tomboyish type who takes no fools and speaks her mind, not saying something appalling to Stephen.

As the private lives of the women quickly unravel, they find themselves relying on their neglected familial relationships to find a strength they didn’t know they had.

A lovely, intricately-crafted novel, with some very memorable characters and lines of prose I found myself recalling with a smile. I think this is the third time I’ve read it and I look forward to the fourth.
Profile Image for Hilary.
469 reviews6 followers
August 6, 2022
When Dorothy's husband, Gordon, walks out on their 40-year marriage for the nurse who treated him for his heart attack, the fall-out on the lives of his three adult daughters is immense. As Dorothy moves in with each of them in turn, this exposes the weaknesses in their own marriages/relationships with sometimes surprising consequences.

This is a book about the fragility of human relationships, and about being honest with ourselves. With a large cast and plenty of twists and turns to keep you reading, this is as well written as you would expect from this accomplished writer.

My one complaint is that almost without exception every man in this book is a selfish rotter! All the husbands are unfaithful to their wives, wanting their cake and eating it, and the one exception is a rather sweet but pathetic character. I think a slightly more nuanced view of the opposite sex would have made for a more convincing novel.
Profile Image for David.
665 reviews12 followers
September 29, 2021
Deborah Moggach must have written this book with her tongue firmly pushing against her cheek. Like an exam question: "How can the lives of the members of a nice middle class family disintegrate". Discuss. At the head of the family are Gordon and Dorothy running a firm of builders. Then there are the three grown up daughters, one married with two awkward (what else) children. All their relationships are in peril. This is not always a happy story, but it is told with wit and charm and, at times, totally gripping. As ever with Moggach, no literary masterpiece but a good story.
Profile Image for Terje Aruoja.
144 reviews1 follower
August 18, 2020
Lausa hämmastav, millist vaeva me näeme, et tõele mitte silma vaadata. Selles on midagi kangelaslikku. Kui me kogu selle energia, mida raiskame, vabandused, mida enda jaoks välja mõtleme, ülemaalisse elektrivõrku lülitaksime, võiksime oma enesepettusega tervet linna valgustada. (lk 136)
Aga tagantjärele tarkus lihtsustab möödunut ja püüab õigustada juhtunut, mineviku sündmusi hakatakse nägema mustvalgelt. (lk 179)
Profile Image for Kate.
737 reviews25 followers
June 15, 2021
I have been wanting to read this author for a while and finally one came available at my library - this was it. I enjoyed the family’s change of perspective as their Father made a u turn in his life. Perfect reading to be in the background of ones on life at the end of day or when there’s a space to enjoy.

I’m guessing it won’t be hugely memorable but certainly pleasurable to read, it’s aged a bit due to technology etc but I will definitely try a later novel by the same author.
511 reviews
December 17, 2023
Unusual book by an author I always enjoy. Each book seems very different that she has written but all are interesting stories that are told well.
This book is about a 17 year old girl who gets kidnapped for a ransom. The story follows the impact this has on the girl herself, her family and the kidnappers. All are left very different after the experience and the consequences are far reaching and unexpected.
92 reviews
October 3, 2022
I seem to have raced through this book but feel manipulated. “Later, she would remember this moment” is repeated several times, heralding a crisis. There were a lot of characters to keep track of. Everything is resolved at the end to suggest a happy ending. If it was a film I would not have even thought of seeing it.
Profile Image for Jill.
222 reviews
Read
June 24, 2022
As always Deborah Moggach weaves a compelling tale of family life - loves and losses, twists and dips, happiness and grief.
I don't think it is as good as some of her other books but a story worth reading.
Profile Image for Kathleen Jowitt.
Author 8 books21 followers
Read
December 28, 2020
Explores the unspoken inadequacies and pitfalls of relationships with a jaundiced eye. But really quite fun.
Profile Image for Lyn.
758 reviews4 followers
January 19, 2022
A compelling story of family breakdown.
63 reviews
August 20, 2022
Deborah Moggach is very good at painting characters. This is about the repercussions for a family after their father has a heart attack. I couldn’t put it down.
3 reviews
October 23, 2022
I really enjoyed the book. First time I’ve read this author. The characters were well described and there were lots of twists in the story. I am looking for my next Deborah Moggach book.
87 reviews
December 17, 2022
This is the third novel I have read by Deborah Moggach. Like the other 2, she has great character development. Interesting characters. Beautifully written book.
12 reviews
November 1, 2024
Great book. The read draws you along like you’re watching it in a movie. Couldn’t put it down. Great characters , funny, sad and emotional at times.
Profile Image for Catherine.
485 reviews1 follower
April 3, 2011
A family full of people having problems in love: marriages falling apart, relationships going sour in unexpected ways and generally no-one having a good time of it. But I suppose novels are like newspapaers: good news is no news. It was sad that all the happiness in tthe book was fleeting, but at least one became bothered enough to care. The style is also rather choppy, with lots of changes of point of view. This and the presence of some salacious details that make this a not for the prudish book, suggest it was written with filming in mind from the start. The copy I read had a TV tie in dustjacket and lots of typos, some of which should have been picked up by simple use of a spellchecker. Words like "privilidged" tend to jump out at me, slow down my reading and spoil my enjoyment.
Profile Image for Anita.
53 reviews1 follower
Read
February 16, 2014
I read this book on a rainy Sunday and it was perfect for the day. Not a taxing book and by the same author as 'Marigold hotel' but I didn't find it as good or enjoyable. It was not a subject for humour . A family with troubles. Hmmmmmm Not great but a good read.
Profile Image for Lindsay.
1,329 reviews20 followers
May 30, 2010
This was a bit painful to read. Every emotion and thought was so clearly stated that it didn't leave any work for the reader. Also a lot of coincidences!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews

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