Cathy's Reviews > A Complicated Matter
A Complicated Matter
by
by
Cathy's review
bookshelves: advance-review-copy, historical-fiction, netgalley, publisher-review-copies, hf-reading-challenge-2023
Mar 16, 2023
bookshelves: advance-review-copy, historical-fiction, netgalley, publisher-review-copies, hf-reading-challenge-2023
I've enjoyed both of Anne Youngson's previous two books - Meet Me at the Museum and Three Women and a Boat (now titled The Narrowboat Summer) - and I was pleased to have the opportunity to exchange a few words with her and have her sign my copy of Meet Me at the Museum at Henley Literary Festival in 2018 when she appeared alongside A. J. Pearce, author of Dear Mrs. Bird.
A Complicated Matter is quite different in style and subject matter from Three Women and a Boat, as well as not being set in the present day but during and after the Second World War. However I did find echoes of Meet Me at the Museum in the parts of the book that explore feelings of isolation and finding yourself living a life different from that you'd imagined.
I admit I knew nothing about the evacuation from Gibraltar during the war of those referred to as 'useless mouths', i.e. those not required for the defence of the island. This evacuation - of mostly women and children - is the 'complicated matter' of the title. Initially, transported to Morocco, Rose and members of her family find themselves separated from loved ones and experiencing the hostility that refugees often face. At one point there is even a plan to evacuate them to Jamaica; Rose aptly remarks 'as if they're a parcel'.
When they are moved to London they experience the terror of the Blitz alongside other Londoners. But of course they're not like other Londoners; they have been placed in an entirely alien environment. Rose's friend Sonia, working as governess to a family, expresses the feeling of dislocation well when she writes, 'Isn't it hard being here instead of at home, speaking English all the time, but never feeling English? Not being able to to see the sea? Being surrounded by greenery instead of by rock. Not knowing what is going to happen to us next?' Rose struggles to find a useful role for herself, besides caring for her disabled mother, although actually she is more useful than she gives herself credit for.
The book is structured as Rose's story, written by herself, for the consumption of a person who is not identified until near the end of the book. Slightly confusingly this person is referred to in the third person until such time as their identity becomes clear. The most absorbing part of the book for me was the final section in which Rose takes up a position as secretary to Major Inchbold. I thought it was clever of the author to make Major Inchbold blind as it means he can't judge Rose on the basis of what she looks like or what she wears, but only what she says and does, how she interacts with other people. There is a moment when Rose enables Major Inchbold to sense her appearance that I found mildly erotic. Major Inchbold's moments of anger, borne out of frustration more than anything else, are also a neat echo of Rose's mother's often spiky personality.
I admired the insightful way the author explored Rose's situation and that of anyone who finds themselves uprooted from the surroundings they have known and I found the ending rather moving.
A Complicated Matter is a gently paced novel about displacement, identity and finding your place in the world.
A Complicated Matter is quite different in style and subject matter from Three Women and a Boat, as well as not being set in the present day but during and after the Second World War. However I did find echoes of Meet Me at the Museum in the parts of the book that explore feelings of isolation and finding yourself living a life different from that you'd imagined.
I admit I knew nothing about the evacuation from Gibraltar during the war of those referred to as 'useless mouths', i.e. those not required for the defence of the island. This evacuation - of mostly women and children - is the 'complicated matter' of the title. Initially, transported to Morocco, Rose and members of her family find themselves separated from loved ones and experiencing the hostility that refugees often face. At one point there is even a plan to evacuate them to Jamaica; Rose aptly remarks 'as if they're a parcel'.
When they are moved to London they experience the terror of the Blitz alongside other Londoners. But of course they're not like other Londoners; they have been placed in an entirely alien environment. Rose's friend Sonia, working as governess to a family, expresses the feeling of dislocation well when she writes, 'Isn't it hard being here instead of at home, speaking English all the time, but never feeling English? Not being able to to see the sea? Being surrounded by greenery instead of by rock. Not knowing what is going to happen to us next?' Rose struggles to find a useful role for herself, besides caring for her disabled mother, although actually she is more useful than she gives herself credit for.
The book is structured as Rose's story, written by herself, for the consumption of a person who is not identified until near the end of the book. Slightly confusingly this person is referred to in the third person until such time as their identity becomes clear. The most absorbing part of the book for me was the final section in which Rose takes up a position as secretary to Major Inchbold. I thought it was clever of the author to make Major Inchbold blind as it means he can't judge Rose on the basis of what she looks like or what she wears, but only what she says and does, how she interacts with other people. There is a moment when Rose enables Major Inchbold to sense her appearance that I found mildly erotic. Major Inchbold's moments of anger, borne out of frustration more than anything else, are also a neat echo of Rose's mother's often spiky personality.
I admired the insightful way the author explored Rose's situation and that of anyone who finds themselves uprooted from the surroundings they have known and I found the ending rather moving.
A Complicated Matter is a gently paced novel about displacement, identity and finding your place in the world.
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Reading Progress
October 10, 2022
– Shelved
October 10, 2022
– Shelved as:
to-read
October 10, 2022
– Shelved as:
advance-review-copy
October 10, 2022
– Shelved as:
historical-fiction
October 10, 2022
– Shelved as:
netgalley
October 10, 2022
– Shelved as:
publisher-review-copies
March 10, 2023
– Shelved as:
hf-reading-challenge-2023
March 11, 2023
–
Started Reading
March 13, 2023
–
20.0%
March 14, 2023
–
42.0%
March 15, 2023
–
63.0%
March 16, 2023
–
78.0%
March 16, 2023
–
Finished Reading