Deborah Moggach showcases her stellar skills in characterisation in this poignant and shrewdly observed insights into family dynamics, the painful aspects of getting older and the disintegration of the physical body, imperfect marriages, and emotionally blighted childhoods. Robert and Phoebe are middle aged siblings are at their wit's ends after employing carers for their elderly father, James, that left a lot to be desired. However, the answer to all their prayers comes in the shape of Mandy, who lifts the burden off their shoulders as she proves to be more than competent as she takes complete charge of James's care with gusto and an enviable cheerfulness. So her political opinions of the Daily Mail variety and low brow cultural tastes are not to their liberal sensibilities, but their father responds to Mandy in a way that he never has with his own children.
Robert worked in the city but is now a aspiring novelist, is married to the passive aggressive Farida, a well known breakfast news presenter, and has two children. Robert is plagued with free floating anxiety, existential angst and a bottomless sense of failure. Phoebe is a struggling artist, briefly married to a alcoholic, and with a string of unsatisfactory relationships under her belt. She lives in Knockton, a small town in Wales, and currently involved with Torren. Robert and Phoebe are heavily weighed down by childhood baggage with their desperation to gain their father's attention, a particle physicist who spent much time away from home, casualties of their parents utter devotion. and all encompassing love for each other. As they observe James having a hoot with Mandy, and see a closeness between them that has never been on offer to them, they are understandably feeling the odd pangs of jealousy as their father appears to have entirely changed personality in his twilight years. However, their suspicions of Mandy are aroused over strange incidents, the rapid decline of James and his visit to Oxford.
Robert and Phoebe are to discover that not all is as it seems, that their perceptions of their parents bear little relationship to reality, and that Mandy is to have an irrevocable impact on their lives, as they become closer to each other as a result. Moggach shines a light on class distinctions, flawed families, where open warfare is reserved for your nearest and dearest, your family, and where memories of the past are not always reliable. This is a touchingly profound family drama, wryly amusing, and never less than compulsive, and where the highlight for me was the authentically realised characters, warts and all. Many thanks to Headline for an ARC.