Joanna Trollope has made a career out of writing about family, relationships and marriage, in this novel she gives us three generations of a family and the dynamics between them. There are the grandparents, Monica and Gus, their three children and their families, bought up short when Monica discovers her husband, Gus, has suffered from a stroke. Decades ago, they had left England for Spain, an unhappy Monica from a generation where women followed and did what their husbands wanted, leaving behind children at boarding school. Gus got involved with a vineyard and set up a wine business, their marriage not in the best of states through the years, but Gus's stroke leaves Monica bewildered and unsure as her familiar world threatens to fall apart. She has not seen her children for some years, highlighting the lack of communication between them.
Gus is selfish, stroppy and antisocial, all too used to getting his own way. Their family descends on them, with Sebastian, married to Anna who has never got on with Monica. Anna is a dominant personality, and she and the kids show barely any respect to Sebastian. Katie has been with her partner, Nic, for twenty years, they have never got married. She is a hard working lawyer, the main earner, barely aware of the problems, distress and secrets that her daughters harbour. Like her mother, Katie not been the best role model for motherhood. Jake, with a more laid back personality, has recently married Bella and has a eighteen month old Mouse. All have their own different ideas with regard to their parents ill health, business and age issues. There are resentments, rivalries, poor communications, secrets, all exacerbated by their past distance from each other.
The scene is set for the potential for further family discord and dysfunction, have they got it in them to survive, to come together as a family that supports one another? Trollope writes a well observed and insightful inter-generational family drama, examining the nature of family, the complications associated with it, not to mention all the trials and tribulations that tend to go with it. This will appeal to Trollope fans and all those who love a good, character driven, contemporary family drama. Many thanks to PanMacmillan for an ARC.