The Bright Side Running Club (formerly published as The Cancer Ladies’ Running Club) is a heart-warming English novel about a busy mother’s shock diagnosis with breast cancer and how she gets through it thanks to the love and support of her new running friends. It’s fiction, but based on the author’s own experiences, and is an honest and sometimes painful but often funny look at a disease which will affect one in eight of us. I picked it because it was about running (which I want to get back into) and saved it to start on New Year’s Day, which seemed appropriate.
Kiera is a happily married 47 year old mother of three who runs a gift shop in an unnamed Southern English town, when what she thinks is a routine callback following her mammogram delivers the frightening news that she has breast cancer. Her family and colleagues want to help but don’t understand, so when a surprise invitation from a fellow patient to try a gentle jog in the park leads to a new support system, Kiera finds the strength to endure the most challenging year of her life.
What I liked most about this was how real this felt - Kiera is flawed and very relatable - trying to do her best with her husband, kids and business, but susceptible to insecurity, mood swings and manipulation by those close to her. Her communication failures were sometimes infuriating but completely understandable. The medical details are uncensored and sometimes brutal, as we share her journey through surgery, chemo and it’s complications, radiotherapy, her fears about the change in her body and her sexuality, and the impact on her relationship with her husband and children.
“ I try to make jokes over breakfast, but the kids look at me as if I’m speaking in poor taste. Oh yes, I’ve forgotten. The sense-of-humor thing. Not allowed when you have cancer. Silly me.”
“It occurs to me now why people call it a bucket list. Not just because of kicking it, but because this is the kind of wretched moment, when you’re about to fill a bucket, when your long list of unfulfilled wishes rears up.”
It’s never depressing though, and being fiction, allows a happy ending in spite of some sad parts (no spoilers.) I had a mammogram scare the week before my 50th birthday, and by the ultrasound appointment was secretly planning my funeral. The relief at being dismissed with a “see you in two years” was immense, because I’m not sure I’d cope as well as these women do, but reading this now gives me hope that maybe I too might surprise myself. I loved the support characters, especially Tamsin and Amma. I wasn’t sure about the side plot about the shop, it was a bit too obvious what was going on, but I liked the way it was resolved. I’d recommend this book to any younger middle-aged woman facing a trip to Cancer World themselves or with a close friend - there were some useful insights on what (and what not) to say and do - acknowledging that everyone is different of course. 4.5 rounded down for the present tense narration.
Thanks to NetGalley and Alcove Press for the ARC. I am posting this honest review voluntarily.
The Bright Side Running Club is published on February 8th 2022.