I didn't love this book, because it sort of depressed me, hence the three star rating. However, it is a brilliant book, very clever, differernt, beautifully written and constructed, and at some points was definitely a page turner. It just lacked warmth and joy for me, so I will explain why. Wilberforce is in his thirties, a successful computer software developer, but he has never been in love, never really had friends, and was never truly loved by his foster parents as a child. He has thrown himself into his company and and worked day and night with no social life. However, one day he takes a car ride, finds a shop and a country house, and meets some new people there. Francis Black is a wine merchant and obsessive. His friends Ed, Eck, and Catherine are of a higher class, extremely well off and connected, and they somewhat take the lonely Wilberforce under their wing. The story though, is told back to front. A very interesting twist, but that is what makes it depressing! It starts with the end; Wilberforce, his wife dead, his friends hate him, Francis Black dead, and nothing to live for, has become a complete alcoholic on the verge of death. What follows is the story of how he got there, going back one segment at a time until we are at the point when Wilberforce first met them all. To begin with I quite disliked him. I found the endless descriptions of wine quite boring, and I found his attitude to life disappointing and frustrating. True, as the story unfolds backwards, I did begin to understand what had happened to him, and at times felt very sorry for him. A few of the characters mention that he is like 'anybody' or 'nobody' or like a person who is empty, with something missing, and that was my overall feeling about him as well. You do start to understand why as the book goes on, but you also get a sense of doom slip over you, because you know how it is going to end for him! This was an interesting book, but it just didn't give me enough. I wasn't inspired or pulled in, I didn't really empathise with any of them, despite really wanting to. I would read more from the author though out of curiosity.