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April 6th Michele Roberts - What did you think?
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Apr 08, 2014 10:16AM
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I'm not too enraptured with Daughters Of The House - I'm not entirely sure why. It's the sort of thing that would normally appeal to me - dark secrets from WW2 slowly being discovered by 2 young girls and coming back to haunt them years later.
Perhaps it's that the chapters are all so very short so that it makes it a bit jumpy and hard to sink in to, or maybe it's because I can't latch on to any of the characters - anyway I shall keep going and hope for the best.
Perhaps it's that the chapters are all so very short so that it makes it a bit jumpy and hard to sink in to, or maybe it's because I can't latch on to any of the characters - anyway I shall keep going and hope for the best.
I really liked Ignorance, I liked her writing style - I think it was the first bit that won me over because she was describing a scene involving a painter in a very painterly way, almost impressionistic which I really liked. I haven't started 'Daughters of the house' yet so can't comment on that one.

Finished Daughters of the House but didn't enjoy it - and the ending really annoyed me - perhaps I should give Ignorance a go.

I enjoyed Daughters of the House as well, although I liked Ignorance better. Both had endings that didn't really resolve anything - there was an element of uncertainty in both as to what would happen to the characters after the end. I didn't really mind this but I can see how it would be really annoying! Really well-written books though.
Now am reading Paper Houses: A Memoir Of The 70s And Beyond which is interesting and Roberts writing is just as good in memoir form as it is in novel form.
Wow - you're being very thorough with this month's author I must say :0)
ha ha, there was a few of her books at the library! I'd like to be this thorough with all our monthly authors but availability issues and time constraints abound....

"Giant boots swung at me, kicked me in the belly" (opening a cupboard door)
"Cold air smacked my cheeks...sharp as a chisel was cracking me open"
(walking to market on a spring morning)
"The city flared open around me as though the bus were a knife tearing into flesh"
(bus journey through London). and so on.
At times I couldn't tell what was going on beneath the thick layers of metaphors, but when she calms down a bit, the style is much better eg. "a wounded city, pitted with craters...". On the plus side, the book does bring home the hardship/poverty/victimisation that took place during the Occupation
I don't remember the metaphors in The Daughters of the House being particularly violent . I didn't really like it though - Laurel was much more keen.
I really enjoyed it but if you didn't like the writing style in 'Ignorance', I don't think you'll like it any better in 'Daughters...', that's how she writes ;)

Books mentioned in this topic
Daughters of the House (other topics)Ignorance (other topics)
Paper Houses (other topics)
Daughters of the House (other topics)