Cover Image: Love & Fame

Love & Fame

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Member Reviews

Eve is the daughter of a famed thespian but, although talented, Eve pulled out of her West End debut through nerves. Now newly married to an anxiety expert Eve struggles when her father dies. Beach is a counsellor and her sister Rebecca a journalist, they have their sisterly spats but are generally close. When Rebecca writes about the death of one of Beach's clients it is clear that she had access to privileged information. Now pregnant and struggling to cope Eve confides a theory about her father's death to her counsellor but is shocked to read all about it in the tabloid press.

I found this book very difficult to enjoy, possibly because none of the characters are particularly sympathetic. Therefore I found it a chore rather than a pleasure to make my way through the prose. This is a pity as Boyt has a witty style with her journalism.

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Clever, witty writing, strong characters, the feeling of impending doom! This is a sharp modern novel that deals with some really difficult situations and manages to keep flashes of humour throughout. I don't think it would bring comfort to anyone who has experienced similar situations - but it might make them laugh.

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A book that's very easy to become immersed in yet almost uncomfortable reading at times. Boyt captures the frailties of the human psyche with detail and accuracy

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Having enjoyed, “The Small Hours,” by Susie Boyt, I was pleased to receive her latest novel for review. The storyline revolves around Eve Swift, daughter of much loved actor John Swift. Although she attempts to follow him into the theatre, her initially promising career collapses. Retreating to a job in a bookshop, Eve meets, and married Jim, who is an expert on anxiety. Soon, the two marry and head off on honeymoon in Chicago. Having read Boyt before, though, I suspected that things were not going to be without difficulties and, while away, Eve receives news which devastates her.

This book is about many different themes and it has much to offer as both a personal read and for a reading group. Not only does the story follow the first year of the marriage of Eve and Jim, with all its difficulties, but looks at Eve’s relationship with her mother, Jean. Eve and Jean’s stories also intersects with that of two sisters; a grief counsellor called Beatrice ‘Beach,’ and her younger sister, Rebecca Melville, a journalist. Having lost their mother while they were children, Beach does her best to care for her sister.

Much of this story revolves around things which are often unspoken. Eating disorders, grief, loneliness, failure, and, in these days of social media, the fear that John Swift will stop being a father, a husband, an actor, and become a story… This is a very human story, in which Boyt juggles the various storylines, and characters, well. It also has the hint of tragedy about it, which really does keep the theatrical feeling of John Swift – whose presence is felt throughout – at the very forefront of the novel. I received a copy of this book from the publisher, via NetGalley, for review.

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