It's easy to hold on to the good memories when life becomes challenging ...
Most of us have some distant relatives who we are not in contact with of different reasons. It may be bcause they live far away or you didn't get to know them during your youth. The reasons are many.
That's the way it is with Iris and Ruby. Iris is Ruby's grandmother. Most grandmothers are close with their grandchildren, but it's not with these two. The distance makes it difficult and Ruby's mother doesn't have a particularly good relationship with her mother, so Iris has not been involved in their lives so much.
Ruby lives in England and Iris lives in Egypt, but that doesn't stop Ruby from running away from home and traveling all the way to Egypt on her own, completely unplanned. Iris doesn't even know she's coming. It was all an impulse from Ruby's part. She just wants to get away, escape for many reasons and she ends up to her unknown grandmother who lives a quiet life in Cairo. Iris is starting to become frail and has stayed in her house for many years, and has therefore not noticed any particular changes in her own city. She also lives in her past.
We get brought back to World War II when Iris was young and happy. She had a lover she also became engaged to. It's a period of her life she would like to sit alone and think about in the last part of her life. Her life changes when her granddaughter Ruby unexpectedly appears. She would like to help Iris to remember since the memories of her life is starting to get fragile, but will Iris let her stay? She who's used to being alone with her faithful servants at her mansion?
I don't read novels often, but it happens once in a while. Sometimes I come across some good ones and others who doesn't leave any traces behind. This one didn't leave any trace. It had a good start and I liked this rebel and self-righteous Ruby a lot, but thought that Iri's memories of the past were too slow and the love story was not very inspiring to read about. I liked to read about the present, the bonding between Ruby and Iris. Whether they will create a bond at all or not, of course. I rather wanted to read about that than all this back and forth between the past and present going on. I like books that merge past and present, but this variant did not intrigue me. I don't like love stories much. This love story from Iris's past was also too standard. But it's easy to understand she liked that time better than her current life situation, but that part of the book was neither exciting nor inspirational to read about. I rather wanted to read more about the relationship between Iris and Ruby, and why the relationship between Iris and her own daughter, Lesley, is so strained. I wanted to read more about that part because it was more interesting to me. I also didn't like the way how the past and present was set up. There was no flow in the transitions. It became a little annoying.
Exciting to read about the bonding between Ruby and Iris, and especially to know more about Ruby, the rebel. She's both fun and cool, but apart from that, this novel was just a typical novel where past meets the present, lost love and the fear of forgetting the good times. A book with a good starting point, but the story becomes too thin and repetive for a book that is over five hundred pages long. I like and prefer thick books, but this was too bad. Iris and Ruby would have been better as a short story.