Cover Image: Lump

Lump

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Member Reviews

This started off pretty interesting and I enjoyed all the different perspectives that this story took us through. However it stalled about halfway through and there did not seem to be a lot of forward progress to move the story along. The ending also seemed extremely rushed with no satisfying conclusion. Not sure I'd read again but I can appreciate the effort that went into writing this!

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I saw this book on the header of NetGalley and it sounded intriguing (and I sadly know a few people who’ve had a dual pregnancy and cancer diagnosis) so I requested a copy. Here’s the blurb:

“A dark, satiric novel about a woman whose attempt to escape crises in her health and marriage ends up causing more chaos.
Cat’s career has stalled, her marriage has gone flat, and being a stay-at-home mom for two young kids has become a grind. When she finds out, all within a few days, that she is pregnant, that a lump in her breast is the worst thing it could be, and that her husband has done something unforgivably repulsive, she responds by running away from her marriage and her life ― a life that, on the outside, looks like middle-class success. Her actions send waves of chaos through the lives of multiple characters, including a struggling house cleaner, a rich and charismatic yoga guru, and even an ailing dog. What follows is a dark comedy about marriage, motherhood, privilege, and power.”

I have to say – this isn’t what I expected at all. The pregnancy, breast cancer and husband’s actions don’t come to light until about 40% through the book – I’d figured they’d be near the beginning and the book would be the aftermath – but there is a lot of scene setting. And even once it’s all revealed, the stories are still very much told as separate threads.

The chapters are told from different points of view – be that Cat herself, her husband Donovan, the cleaner and even an ill, old dog. The setting – in Canada – is also explained in quite some detail, which is not somewhere I’ve ever been (although is definitely on the ‘to visit’ list).

To be honest I really am not sure what I thought of it. It was ok? Ish? Different? Possibly my least favourite book of the year so far…….

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC. It’s out electronically in July 2023 if you fancy trying it even without a glowing review from me!

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This book had me in the first quarter/half. The concept was interesting and the way that it was written was super compelling. I thought the writing held up throughout. But the second half really dragged. Things slowed down quite a bit, only to pick up in the final act and rush to the finish. Overall not a bad read, just not the right read for me.

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I get what the intention was... but the execution was just kind of weird. It started out normal, focusing on the female lead and switching perspectives to the people around her, which I did like because it strengthened our understanding of her relationships. Later on, the plot went off in a really weird direction that I didn’t appreciate, enjoy, or understand. As Whitlock explains in his foreword, this is a book about a character with cancer, but once our main character receives her diagnosis, we stop hearing from her. We didn’t get a perspective directly from the main character when I most felt like I would have benefited from it to understand her decisions (we get the POV of a dog…which was surprisingly heartfelt…but was ultimately beating around the bush content-wise for me). She makes decisions that I did not understand at all, and I think the strengths of this book (the varying POVs) were also its downfall (not fully understanding any character). I don’t want to be too negative because this was an interesting book and the writing was good and I didn’t hate it by any means, but this won't be a book that I recommend to all.

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I loved the concept of several POVs adding to one big picture - even the dog was a nice piece of novelty that I haven't really had from other novels. Each POV felt unique and I didn't have to remind myself about whose narrative I was currently reading.

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I struggled with this book which is why I took so long to review it. It just wasn;t for me. However, I can recognise that it was well written.

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Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ !!!!

Wow. Okay, so it’s currently 1am while writing this review, I finished this book about two minutes ago and I just… I feel so many emotions right now. This book will make you want to throw it across the room, while at the same time curling up by a fireplace and wine and dine it. I didn’t expect to love this as much as I did! I laughed and cried and felt all the emotions. I do think that the dark satirical vibes in this one definitely is not for everyone however it very much is for me!! This one hit home 🥲.

Lump is a drama filled novel, revolving around Cat, who finds out she has cancer, is pregnant, and her husband is waving the biggest and brightest red flag. Containing multiple perspectives on intervening lives, a couple side characters that really give the story depth, and as quoted from the blurb, “a very old dog”.

Thank you to Dundurn Press (@dundurnpress) and Netgalley UK for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

This review is crossposted on Netgalley UK, my Instagram & Goodreads 🪷

please make sure to check tw’s before reading! 💓

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This was very well written and very heartfelt. I enjoyed this short but insightful read. Looking forward to more.

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An okay read. One of my big issues with Lump was the pacing. It was quite good at the beginning, it hit a slump about three quarters of the way through, and then the ending felt rushed. Another chapter or two from Cat's POV would have been great. Her story ended a bit unfinished in my opinion. The writing style was quite nice, though. A little less comical than I was expecting

2.5/5

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I tried with this one, but despite am opening that grabbed me, I really struggled to connect with the story... While I found Cat to be initially compelling in the first handful of pages, the shift in perspective was distracting and ultimately led me to lose interest - and unfortunately the pacing thereafter meant I never fell into the story far enough to persevere... This one wasn't a good fit for me.

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This was very well written and very interesting and I enjoyed every moment of it. I hope to see more from this author.

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An emotional rollercoaster of a book, definitely fasten your seatbelt and brace yourself before you begin. There are also plenty of bittersweet and poignant moments and tongue in cheek humour plus glimpses of light against the dark backdrop. It focuses on Cat, who pretty much finds she is pregnant and has cancer at the same time, pretty much by accident and rather awkwardly. Her life is already pretty chaotic and she partner is far less than perfect so when she is rugby tackled by this overwhelming news her world tips on its axis and whatever balance it has before completely collapses.
I love the straightforward and honest approach to life and the ups and downs and imperfections. The descriptions of parenthood and relationships definitely strike many chords and are relatable and the main character is also easy to relate to in a way you imagine how you’d deal with what is being thrown at her by life.
A great read, made me laugh and made me cry pretty much in equal proportions.

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I very much enjoyed this book it is unlike anything that I have read in a long time. I thought the writing style was beautiful. The story was very good but I wish that we got better pacing throughout the book. Overall a good read.

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This is a dark comody about marriage, motherhood, class, and cancer.
Catherine (39) career has stalled as she is a stay- at mum with two young children, and finds out she's pregnant, finds a lump on her breast and finds out her husband has done something unforgivable creepy.

Donovan is her husband and something has changed in their relationship. He was pretending to have a job, but really was sacked from his job for behaving unprofessionally toward Bianca. He claims she was 'prone to melodrama and exaggeration', and claims she wants to get back together with him. But in severance letter Donovan is told not to contact Bianca.

Cat dreams of going back to work as she was a freelance Web site designer. But needs something better to buy a good house for herself and the children.
She takes a job designing website for a pre natal mother group.

Lena works for a cleaning agency.
She cleans Kat's house.
Feels like an object in the house rather than a person that's the way there agency like it, they are told to 'tipto around all day and not speak'.
She takes little moment ions from every house she cleans.
But Kat wants to know why she left her cleaning job, but does not revile her husband's inappropriate behaviour.

Kat collapses on the floor,and finds out she later finds out she is pregnant.
Tells sister Cludia about pregnancy but feels she is to old to be a mother.
Husband tells her to to contact Lina to ask why she quit her job, and they arrange to meet up.

Cat goes to see the doctor 'is your husband with you?' No, but do I really need him and it turns out she really does need someone with her.

Lina goes back to Kat's house, but takes her cousin for support,
but Kat forgets as she has bad news. I don't know why your here- Kat says, but Pauline guesses that she pregnant. But she let's her know what her husband did.

Dunovon goes to his parents to let them know he he wants to be 'compensated, and to secure an official apology for wrongful dismissal' pand claims they were just friendly..
'There was nothing. No actual complains made. You didn't get s warning of any kind, formal or informal' ' nobody could accuse Donovan of focusing on Bianca, though the whole time' .
The lawer goes on to say 'there a gender dimension to the whole thing. And a racial dimension too'
Then there are calls from school and the day care when Kat has not picked the children up.
He take over the child care, when Kat leaves.

Will things improve, with the children settled and all the relationships back on track or at least being sival towards one another?

I liked the novels multiplex POV, as you bond with each character quickly and even the pet dog Louis joins in! It makes you laughter out loud but will also bring a tear to your eye.
I didn't like the long chapter lengths as it makes the story dragged.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for giving me a complementary digital copy of this ebook in exchange for a full, frank and honest review.
All opinions expressed are completely my own.

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this book had a lot of potential, it really did. while it was a quick read, i think it would have benefitted from being a little longer. it was good pacing until the end where everything happened at once. i am willing to give it another go as i am fairly certain it is me and not the book, but the satirical parts of this novel weren't coming across as that for me.

because there were so many POVs to this story, i got confused a lot. i think it would have been better to cut this down and focus on a couple of characters rather than a bunch. it was such a great plot and premise, but sadly the execution fell flat for me. maybe it would have been better if it wasn't a dark satire and focused on being a really heart-wrenching novel?

thank you so much to the publisher for allowing me the chance to read this prior to publication. i am willing to try and read this again in the future.

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Nathan Whitlock's novel 'Lump' is a darkly comedic story about a woman, Cat, struggling with curveballs all thrown to her at once by life. The protagonist is a somewhat relatable character whose journey is full of unexpected twists and turns. The writing is witty, with a balance between humor and pathos.

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All the different perspectives and stories of the different characters made this really interesting, but none of them individually felt whole, and they didn't feel like they came together to form something whole either.

Overall I liked it, but it felt like we were only given snippets of the story. Being left wanting more isn't necessarily a bad thing, but in this case, it just feels like too many important parts were missing.

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I had high hopes for this book. I am a breast cancer survivor and have had several terrible relationships. I thought I'd be able to relate to the female main. Instead, the one I related to the most was the immigrant low-wage woman!

The book is considered dark satire. And while I can see the satirical elements, they mostly made me sad about society as a whole. Which may be the point? Cat discovers she has a lump in her breast, confirmed her husband is terrible, meets a new-age hippy, has awful children, and decides to flee it all for alternative treatments. Sometimes the novel isn't very clear about what actually happens. Like it's being told by vague news articles about the lives of this family. A bunch of unreliable narrators for sure.

In sum, to me, this book is about lies we tell ourselves. I can magic away my medical issues. I am a good person who made one tiny mistake. I am a great mom and raised my kids properly. And about class where it's darkly contrasted with the white upper-middle class family with tons of family resources and the poor immigrant with little support or rights. The book was not what I expected. But I can see fans of Chuck Palahniuk enjoying this. Do not go into it thinking it's about a healthy journey through breast cancer though.

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I would like to thank NetGalley for the advanced readers copy in exchange for my review. I feel like the beginning of the book was the best part. Somewhere along the way I lost sight of the characters and their part of the story. It seemed a little disjointed and then a rush to wrap it all up.

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I think I got about a quarter of the way through and I'm completely disinterested in the story. I felt I gave it a good go but I found myself daydreaming. The story could not hold my attention

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