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Absolutely and Forever – Rose Tremain

Absolutely and Forever – Rose Tremain

I have read Tremain’s Restoration, which I enjoyed and then a friend recommended this one (very different from Restoration)

Here’s the blurb …

A piercing short novel of thwarted love and true friendship from one of our greatest living writers

Marianne Clifford, 15, only child of a peppery army colonel and his vain wife, Lal, falls helplessly and absolutely for Simon Hurst, 18, whose cleverness and physical beauty suggest that he will go forward into a successful and monied future, helped on by doting parents. But fate intervenes. Simon’s plans are blown off course, and Marianne is forced to bury her dreams of a future together.

Narrating her own story, characterising herself as ignorant and unworthy, Marianne’s telling use of irony and smart thinking gradually suggest to us that she has underestimated her own worth. We begin to believe that – in the end, supported by her courageous Scottish friend, Petronella – she will find the life she never stops craving. But what we can’t envisage is that beneath his blithe exterior, Simon Hurst has been nursing a secret which will alter everything.

This is the second novel I have read recently where a character can’t move on – the first being Good Material (It’s not my favourite plot device).

The setting – 50s and 60s England, was fabulous and I loved the relationship between Marianne and Hugo. The writing is exquisite, people are captured in a few deft sentences.

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Restoration – Rose Tremain

Restoration - Rose Tremain

Restoration – Rose Tremain

I have a list of books that I have read and mean to blog about, but it is getting quite long and I don’t take notes while reading, so by the time I get to a particular book on the list all I have is a vague memory of the novel and whether I liked it or not.

Here’s the Wikipedia plot summary for this one …

The novel tells the story of Robert Merivel, a 17th-century English physician. After supervising the recovery of one of the dogs of King Charles II, he is appointed surgeon to all of the king’s dogs. He then joins in all of the debauchery of King Charles’ court. The king then arranges a marriage of convenience between Merivel and one of his mistresses, Celia Clemence. This is done purely to fool the king’s other mistress Barbara Castlemaine. Merivel is given an estate named Bidnold in Norfolk, and Celia is installed in a house in Kew, where the king can visit her secretly.

In Norfolk, Merivel abandons the practice of medicine, and lives a dissipated life in which he tries to take up painting with the help of an ambitious painter named Elias Finn. Things start to change when Celia is sent to Bidnold by the king after displeasing him. One night Merivel drunkenly makes advances to her, and is promptly reported to the king by Elias Finn. The result is that the king confiscates the Bidnold estate from Merivel.

Merivel then joins his old student friend John Pearce at the New Bedlam hospital, also in Norfolk. (New Bedlam is fictitious and should not be confused with the real Bedlam in London.) This is a hospital for the mentally ill, run by Quakers, of whom Pearce is a member. In earlier parts of the novel, Pearce has condemned the sinfulness of Merivel’s lifestyle, and Merivel now joins the hospital with the best of intentions, and hoping to rediscover his medical vocation. However, things go wrong when he has an affair with a patient named Katharine and makes her pregnant. This coincides with the death of Pearce. He is expelled from the hospital, and travels with Katharine to be with her mother in London.

In London, which is then experiencing the Great Plague, Merivel continues practising medicine. Katharine has a baby girl, but dies in childbirth. During the Great Fire of London in 1666, Merivel rescues an elderly woman from a burning house. It is this which regains him the king’s favour, and at the end the king allows him to live at Bidnold with his daughter.

The title of the novel refers both to the Restoration period during which it occurs, and to the novel’s ending when Merivel returns to Bidnold and the king’s favour.

This novel is a rollicking ride of debauchery, finery, sadness and redemption. Merivel cannot stop himself destroying his own advantages – at heart he is a good person, but he is lazy and greedy (for everything food, money the king’s attention). I enjoyed it immensly  and when I get to the end of my enormous pile of to be read books I shall read Merievel: A Man of his Time.

The BBC World Book Club has an interview with Rose Tremain, which is definitely worth listening to and here are more reviews …

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/oct/05/book-club-restoration-rose-tremain

http://www.nytimes.com/1990/04/15/books/a-yuppie-in-king-charles-s-court.html

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