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The Loss Adjustor
 
 

The Loss Adjustor [Kindle Edition]

Aifric Campbell
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Review

'Sexy, sad, riven with longing, 'The Loss Adjustor' confirms a talent of unusual promise.' --Nicholas Shakespeare

`Campbell allows her disturbing story to seep out slowly and to deliver unnerving punches in this extremely well-paced novel' --Mslexia

'Full of beautiful writing... Aifric Campbell's language is rich and exact; her characters painted in deft, tight strokes' --Irish Examiner

`Aifric Campbell's absorbing second novel celebrates friendship past and present and the enduring hope of redemption' --Waterstone's Books Quarterly

'A book that demands to be taken seriously, both because of its ambitions and the beauty of its writing'
--Irish Times

'Campbell writes with lambent precision... a mesmerising study of a woman clinging to the knotted cord of adolescence' --Guardian

'Campbell's style is lyrical, revealing sharp, important truths with mesmerising intensity' --Eithne Farry, Daily Mail

`The flawless depiction of a life destroyed by the devastating loss of a loved one is testament to her skill as a writer' --Sunday Independent

`The imagery is evocative, the narrative well-paced and there is a genuine sense of sympathy with the main character. Thought-provoking' --Scotsman

`Campbell's eloquent prose is both beautiful and compelling, making 'The Loss Adjustor' a haunting and gripping novel' --Ulster Tatler

`A powerful and thought-provoking book ... the real beauty lies in her elegant and evocative prose' --Sunday Business Post

Book Description

Haunting and humane, The Loss Adjustor speaks of grief, forgiveness and redemption

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 429 KB
  • Print Length: 260 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1846687314
  • Publisher: Serpents Tail (3 Mar 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B004OA62MM
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #19,671 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Aifric Campbell
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Caro has a structured life. She goes from day to day working and spending her Sundays visiting the graveyard in which her friend, Estelle, was buried twenty years ago. Her structure is thrown out when Tom, an old man who also frequents the graveyard, starts talking to her a year after they go by not speaking on their visits. Tom, accompanied by his strange dog Jack, opens Caro up to new experiences and she finds herself silently going over parts of her life.

Estelle and Cormac were Caros best friends and she lost them both in the same summer. One dead, the other gone, Caro carried on through life alone. That is until Cormac contacts her out of the blue, she expects to talk like old friends, go over everything that happened and has since gone on.

The Loss Adjustor really wasn't what I expected. I read it and thought that there was perhaps a mystery to be uncovered about the friendship, about Cormac, or about Estelle's death. What it was actually about came as a very nice surprise, and it was a really good read. Caro really isn't someone I can relate to, she's ordered and calculated and a bit of a loner. Her mother is the same, not moving from the kitchen of her house, just reading as many books as she can get a hold of. The family dynamics were unusual to say the least but I'm glad of how they turned out.

I liked that throughout the story you had parts of Caro's personality come out but without the control that Caro usually held onto. It struck me that Caro didn't want any emotional attachment and hadn't since the loss of Estelle. When Caro goes over parts of her childhood with Estelle and Cormac it's obvious that the relationship wasn't exactly a normal one. Three isn't a good number and this is very evident in this story. It's obvious that Caro's personality comes from their friendship and what happened between them, you could see that Caro had had her heart broken, in places by the both of them.

The name of the story is a highly important part of this story. Not only is Caro a loss adjustor, someone who calculates the loss of a person's insurance claim, but she is also still adjusting to the loss of her friend. I liked this link a lot and although parts of the end of the book is left for the reader to speculate I believe that it is very fitting when you take into account this link.

I loved the character of Tom. He surprised me a lot because I expected the story to be completely focussed on Caro and Cormac. Tom appeared to me to be on a mission and I think he probably fulfilled that mission. I also loved the stories that her told of the war and the way Aifric told these stories really captivated me.

I read a lot of young adult books and it was nice to have a break from young adult. The story line grabbed my attention when I believed it would deal with a death within friends and even though it wasn't what I expected I still got sucked into it. I thought it a little slow to start off with once I got into it, probably around the point where Tom started talking to Caro, I couldn't put the book down!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Absorbing 27 Feb 2011
By Lincs Reader TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Aifric Campbell's 'The Loss Adjustor' is a novel of characters, extremely absorbing and very well-written characters that together make up this remarkable novel.
Caro is a loss adjustor, she spends her life dealing with people who are grieving - for lost possessions and lost loved ones. It is clear that inside, Caro is grieving too - she has suffered loss in her life and these losses have affected her whole life.
Her beloved Father died when she was young and her Mother disappeared into a world of books. Caro's two childhood best friends are lost to her aswell. Estelle died many years ago and her childhood sweetheart Cormac is now a wildly successful rock star who she sees only on the television.
Although Estelle is dead and Cormac only briefly appears towards the end of the novel, it is these two people that make up most of the story. Caro has never recovered from either Estelle's death or Cormac's sudden departure and has allowed these events to colour her life and her feelings for the past twenty years.
It is only when Caro meets Tom and his little dog Jack that she allows any to get a glance of the real her. The scenes where Tom and Caro travel to France to visit the military graveyards are wonderfully poignant. The little terrier dog Jack almost steals the show, a fabulous characterful animal.
This is not a light-hearted read, but it is a beautifully crafted story. The characters spring to life and the story is absorbing.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Dealing with loss 8 Feb 2011
Format:Hardcover
This book abounds with examples of loss and mourning. It is perfectly paced and beautifully structured and -written about the idyllic youth of 3 children who live in adjoining houses. Caro lives in the middle house with her taciturn parents. She often eats and spends the night next door on either side with Cormac's and Estelle's warmer and noisier families. The three spend their childhood and youth exploring the wilderness around their isolated hamlet, until puberty begins to cause frictions.
Then, at age 15, fate strikes suddenly and repeatedly. Caro's father dies of a heart attack; his desperate border collie Spike senses more trouble and runs under a passing car; then Estelle meets with violent death and her family moves away almost instantaneously; soon after, musical prodigy Cormac waves goodbye to Caro to fulfill his dream. Caro, the I-person in the novel, stays behind, traumatised, filled with loss.
According to specialists, three months of mourning is normal, quite OK. After that it should be clear to the mourner that life without the deceased is meaningful and possible. If it is not over after three months, treatment is opportune, necessary.
Caro is 35 when she writes about the break up of the trio and her struggle to live a life without them. Professionally, she has done well. She is a brilliant claims adjustor with a major insurance company, but even to her closest associates she remains an enigma. A chance meeting with pensioner Tom in Estelle's cemetery marks the beginning of a new phase in Caro's life.
This is a book full of spirituality, esp. regarding Estelle. It is perhaps a woman's book, but male readers are advised to read Tom's account of passing the sins of fathers onto the children.
Rich, engrossing novel. Will buy her debut novel and hope Aifric Campbell will write many more great books like this.
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