
A Perfect Sentence
by Patrick Starnes
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Pub Date Apr 05 2018 | Archive Date May 24 2018
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Description
A dark, suspenseful novel about a fifty-something man who's lost his way, and his incendiary relationship with a younger woman. Nominated for the Whitbread First Novel prize.
TAGLINE: We reap what we sow.
A portrait of a modern family in crisis, a moving love story and a chilling narrative of revenge, A Perfect Sentence moves swiftly from London through Florence, the South of France and Morocco and ends dramatically in Barcelona's cosmopolitan Barri Gotic.
Kier Buchan, a fifty-something Londoner who has recently been made redundant by the Open University, is disaffected and wryly bitter. He is the father of brainy Charlie who is heading for graduate school in America and of teenager Cat who is heading nowhere. His cool, sensible wife Fran feels his disquiet but cannot connect. Kier recounts his role in the break-up of his family and an entanglement in an inappropriate relationship with a much younger woman which he dares to hope will lead to an escape from his old self.
Advance Praise
Nominated for the Whitbread First Novel prize.
Nominated for the Whitbread First Novel prize.
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9781786080554 |
PRICE | $14.99 (USD) |
Links
Featured Reviews

I don't know whether to term Keir as the hero or the antagonist in this book because he plays both roles so well that I couldn't put this book down. I received an eARC from NetGalley and let's just say that this story opens with a common plot: a middle aged man leaves his wife and family for a young woman. Then it builds on that plot where for Keir, this woman happens to be Cassie, his son's love interest. Keir fails at an attempted suicide and when his son asks him to check up on Cassie, he sleeps with her. Everything else spirals downward after that.
With well developed characters, a non-linear plot and most of all a dynamic lead character, this book's a treat.

It's a common enough theme for a novel. An angst-ridden middle-aged man finds himself redundant on the scrapheap in his 50s, struggles to relate to his family and ends up with a twenty year old girlfriend and, finally, faces the inevitable fallout which, believe me, is quite extreme!
Keir Buchan is the hero, maybe anti-hero, with a competent, sassy wife, Fran, an emotionally confused son, Charlie, and a daughter, called Catherine, who is going through her A Levels and a kind of Gothic phase. Charlie, at the start of the novel, is besotted with a new American girlfriend called Cassie and it all kind of rolls on from there predictably to start with and then, later, surprisingly. Along the way we get a road movie of a journey across southern Europe as everybody's lives become more chaotic. At the end, the resolution is fairly bleak.
Keir is a difficult character, relatively settled in a job at the Open University and then made redundant. I think perhaps we are meant to sympathise with him but I found him increasingly unlikable. He constantly disparages people from a kind of intellectual snobbery so he manages not to like his in-laws, his wife's friends, Cassie's mates and, for long periods of time, his own family. His world view is not pleasant, he behaves badly at dinner parties and is given to nostalgia and self-pity. He also fails to relate to his wife, children and even past lovers but all this is meant to be redeemed by a kind of superior chuckling about the state of the world. He finds trust difficult, some of his reactions to situations are unthinking and he has a tendency to run away and go for long walks rather than confront situations. As you can see, I didn't like him much!
That doesn't matter for the first half of the novel which could be summarised as cynical old bastard against the world but, in the second half, not to give too much away, he falls for the son's girlfriend in a big way. It is hard as a reader to go along with this romantic renewal and excitement and, although poor Cassie joins in, you can't help thinking that she is looking for the dad who deserted her. Keir, meanwhile, has deserted wife and family and doesn't feel guilty enough to my mind.
The dénouement is tragic and unexpected and then, contrary to all we have come to expect, Keir does one decent thing and takes the rap. I think this is glossed as is the way in which Fran finds out what he's done and sort of sympathises as if to approve. Catherine, the daughter, grows up and becomes sensible, surprisingly undamaged by events while the slighted son - totally destroyed - disappears conveniently in India.
It's an entertaining read and a well written story although I found some of the generalisations about people in general, Americans specifically, and foreign places a little second-hand. I warmed to the wife who was trying to hold everything together and, maybe, the idea is that the man with the midlife crisis finally gets what he deserves but I wasn't really convinced that I cared by that stage.

<b> Provocateur </b>
Whether you call it a mid-life crisis or the 'grass is greener' syndrome, Keir should have everything he wants yet he has serious reassurance issues with his marriage, his employment and his family. The story is wonderfully written to illustrate a malcontent middle-aged man, fearing being trapped in a relationship, loss of individually, and an end to life’s excitements.
Keir’s wife, Fran, is a clever woman aware of his infidelities in the past but trying to keep the marriage together. Keir and Fran have 2 children, Charlie, besotted by the new love of his life Cassie, and en-route to MIT, and Cat a teenage Goth too cool to be associated with parents. Cassie is a free-spirited, straight talking, non-committal type of woman. In truth, I didn’t care much for any of the characters although they were well developed. Keir, I just couldn’t warm to.
In the end, the marriage fails and Keir jumps into a mesmerising seductive relationship with Cassie. They travel around Europe in a distorted reality, with its own set of challenges. Every action or lack of action has a consequence, so what are the consequences for Keir and Cassie?
The Perfect Sentence is a well-written book with clever detail and dialogue. It is an exploration and exposition of human relationships and how fragile and precarious they are. The perfect relationship match is so difficult to find and many of the issues covered are more reflective of the norm in society today. We are irrational beings, however, we have a judicial system to keep our actions in check should we stray too far.
The book is very well written, with a great moral and ethical challenge, but I couldn’t empathise with any of the characters. Certain scenes did ramble a bit but overall a steady pace to the story.
Many thanks to Thistle Publishing and NetGalley for an ARC version of the book in return for an honest review.

I really loved this novel. I loved everything about this novel and found myself not being able to put it down. Thanks to Red Door Pub and NetGalley for giving me this complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

Overall an entertaining read!
See full review here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2367793316

At first I thought this novel was a bit like Joseph Heller's Something Happened. It certainly started in the same vein, navel gazing by a middle aged man who has lost his way and motivation. A tired marriage, kids who are floundering somewhat, and the ennui that generally accompanies life at predictable stages. Of course the text seemed to veer off into familiar territory, that of the older man having a fling with a much younger woman, in this case, his son's girlfriend. While the plot was altogether expected, the writing itself was luscious, I loved the style and verbiage used by the author, indeed that is what pulled me in, however it was not enough to sustain the book until the end, where it meandered off any meaningful path. Maybe that meandering itself was the plot and the point.
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