The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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The Safekeep
Booker Prize for Fiction
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2024 Booker Shortlist - The Safekeep
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Jul 30, 2024 06:47AM


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I almost DNF'ed in the first 10 pages and then again at the halfway point, but things did turn around for me in the second half.


OK not that relevant to the Booker but more interesting!



Maybe this is just due to my own bias, but I do think that the romance was the heart of this story and it made perfect sense that the narrative centred it more than the historiographical background towards the end. I thought the novel did a good job balancing both in a particularly lengthy chapter towards the end.


OK not that relevant to the Booker but more intere..."
Thank you, Paul! :)





The Safekeep is the kind of book your Aunt Dolores will love. It is easy, it is breezy, it has mass appeal. I can see it being adapted for the big screen. Starring Keira Knightley and Rosamund Pike.
While the premise of the novel is intriguing – two women navigating desire, obsession and displacement in post-WWII Netherlands – too much hinges on a plot twist to save the day.
I wish an author like Sophie Mackintosh or Sarah Bernstein had tackled this story. Yael van der Wouden creates a vibe that is similar to the aforementioned authors – atmospheric, sensual, mysterious – but in van der Wouden’s hands the story becomes a tad too neat, too obvious, too “constructed”. A feat of engineering, rather than a work of poetry.
By the time the novel ends, every theme, every scene, is tied up neatly in a bow. And lest you have any doubts as to what the author is trying to convey, the text will spell it out for you, three times in a row:
“You don’t have to be her, Isabel.”
Her meant their mother.
She knew he meant their mother.
As a Booker nominee, I wished the text was weirder, darker, more daring. Less sentimental. Less milquetoast.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
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Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer
(last edited Aug 14, 2024 06:52AM)
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rated it 4 stars

I did like the way the author thanked her own family in the afterword for their respect in not referring to Chapter 10.

Although there would need to be more watery metaphors."
I did think of Julia Armfield too (!), but haven't read her latest yet.
On Chapter 10, as a Booker nominee, I had hoped it would be more transgressive, more subversive, more boundary-pushing, in content and in form.
Apropos the acknowledgements section, it reads to me like a crowdsourced novel that elicited too much feedback from too many readers, in the process plugging to many gaps and losing all of its edges. The author didn't have to over explain quite so much.
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Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer
(last edited Aug 14, 2024 10:48PM)
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rated it 4 stars



I did like the way the author thanked her own family in the afterword for their respect in not referring to Chapter 10."
I have a funny story about Chapter 10. I read this on audiobook and when I'm in my car the bluetooth automatically starts playing what I was last listening to. I was going out to lunch with some coworkers and I offered to drive. Of course I only remembered the bluetooth thing when it started playing while my coworkers were in the car. I've never turned down the volume so fast in my life.

The Safekeep is the kind of book your Aunt Dolores will love. It is easy, it is breezy, it has mass appeal. I can see it being adapted for the big..."
Great review. I read it when I was about a third of the way through and I wonder how much it influenced my opinion the rest of the way. I ended up liking it a little more than you (3.5)--sometimes I wonder if I tend to grade debut authors on a curve-- but I agree that it doesn't live up the promise of the premise or even the beginning. In the beginning, it did feel like we were going to get something dark that raises interesting questions, but it definitely become melodramatic and a little too neat.
I agree that she spelled too much out. That was actually an issue I had with Prophet Song last year. It takes a confident author to trust their readers enough to pick up on the themes and motifs without spelling them out so much that they lose their effectiveness.


Thank you.
Added to that, I think the novel had the potential to be brutal and hard-hitting. It could have been a real gut punch. It played it too safe for me, living up to its title.

It actually worked well - I think because the book is more than the twist: Isabelle re-examining aspects of her life (the confrontations with Uncle Karel and Rian) and then the working out of her relationship with Eva. So knowing what was coming (which anyway I know different readers worked out at different times) did not really change the story.
It’s not to say though that it’s even close to the top or even the middle of my list - but I may move it above Headshot which I found really lacking on a re-read.

I did like the way the author thanked her own family in the afterword for their respect in ..."
That is funny! ;-)


I agree with you, Sam. This is book for adults. We only need a lead-in sentence, and our imagination can fill in the rest. I have no desire to read erotica, especially in a Booker-longlisted book. I was pleased that Anne Michaels in Held only gave us a hint and let our imagination fill in the details.
I want to add that the sex being same-sex had nothing to do with it for me. I would have felt the same had the book been hetero-sex. We just don't need sex scenes spelled out. Unless a person is looking for erotica, it's a big turn-off.
I did like the atmosphere in this book, though I wish it had been a darker book, but I'm one who loves dark books and plenty of tragedy. I get lighter moments during the few hours I watch TV.



This one is actually proving very popular with loudest of Booker followers on Instagram in particular.


Fair point!




I also enjoyed Absolution by Alice McDermott which also explores the aftermath of war. These two books are implicating people who are removed from the front lines but are ultimately benefactors of the evils of war. Really loved this one and hope it's short listed.


I actually quite enjoyed it. Yes you can pretty much guess where it is going to end up but I think there's a bit more depth than people are acknowledging.
I wouldn't say it is aspiring to be a great literary novel and I'm a bit surprised that it has made the longlist but for me it was a lot more enjoyable than at least half the books on the list and a lot better than at least one or two of them.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Empusium: A Health Resort Horror Story (other topics)Daughters of the House (other topics)
The Safekeep (other topics)
The Safekeep (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Michèle Roberts (other topics)Yael van der Wouden (other topics)