I wish she had left, this was boring as anything! I only continued reading it because it was for a book club and I wanted to try hard to complete it. The best bit happens in the last 15 pages but the blurb already tells you what's going to happen so you aren't even excited about getting there!
Hattie and Martyn aren't married, they are `partnered'. They have a little baby, called Kitty and are on the look out for an au pair so that Hattie can return to work. I think Fay Weldon was trying to get us to look at modern life and has taken it to an extreme, I don't know, it's my opinion. It would have been good if it had been a take on the way we live our lives but it wasn't well written enough for that. The story is narrated by Frances who is Hattie's grandmother. This is where a second story runs parallel, in that we live Frances' life as well.
The characters are boring, very selfish, snobbish people - maybe they were written that way intentionally. A predictable plot that mirrors the blurb, nothing is a surprise. We are given a look into both Hattie and Martyn's life - who they work with and why they are motivated to be the way they are (they simply want to be better than anyone else). We are also invited into Agnieszka's life (the au pair) as and when Hattie 'discovers' something about her.
I still don't understand why we were told everything as it happened. I got to the end not feeling like there was any spark that could make me recommend this book. I couldn't even picture what the characters would look like. Too much emphasis was placed on Hattie gaining weight etc as it was obvious why Agnieszka was 'fattening' her up - to move her out and get herself into the marital bed: this was explicit.
This is my first Fay Weldon novel and I have a feeling it may be my last. I do have a few others dotting around from charity buys but I think they may go unread now unless I'm persuaded otherwise. I really can't see the point to this novel. The sentences were quite blunt, which clearly reflected the selfishness and insecurities of the characters but made for disjointed reading. I begain to enjoy Frances' life story more with the details of her and Serena's (Frances' sister) number of husbands and wrong doings. I couldn't work out the family structure in great deal as they all aren't mentioned in enough detail.