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I read ‘Sorrow of sisters’ back in 2008 and have just finished rereading it. The main character is 49-year-old Jane. She’s happily married to an accountant called Chas; they have a comfortable relationship, and are clearly good friends as well as a married couple. He is helpful and understanding, while quite matter-of-fact; a good foil to Jane, who is full of imagination. She’s also a popular writer of women’s romantic fiction.
Jane and Chas have no children, but most of the time she’s fine with this. She’s less enthusiastic about her relationship with her cranky father, Henry, who lives on his own. He’s a retired doctor, but still sees some patients. She’s never felt very close to him, or to her mother Victoria, who died some years previously. And in the past few months, before the story opens, she’s been feeling quite disturbed. She isn’t able to write, and keeps making excuses and procrastinating. She puts it down, in part, to her age. And then she receives a letter from a solicitor telling her that her aunt Lillian has died, and has left Jane her cottage on the Isle of Wight.
But Jane had no idea that she had an aunt. She had been told that both her parents were only children, and believed that her father was her only remaining relative. She confronts him, and he admits that his wife had a sister, but they didn’t speak to each other. He says that the cottage is probably a shack, and suggests she ask the lawyer to sell it. Jane decides that she will take a trip to the Isle of Wight to see her inheritance; Chas is supportive, and she doesn’t tell her father that she’s going…
In Jane’s cottage there is an elderly woman called Emmeline who tells her that she knew Lillian well. By the time they meet, the reader knows that Emmeline and Lillian were more than friends; some of the sections of the book are written from Emmeline’s perspective. And some include flashbacks where its as if the deceased Lillian is speaking to her - it’s never entirely clear if this is somehow the case, or whether Emmeline is reading some of the detailed journals that Lillian kept.
It’s really very cleverly written; a most impressive debut novel. Gradually more and more information and secrets are revealed, through discussions and flashbacks, allowing readers to keep a step ahead of Jane. She discovers what she thinks caused her rather traditional, uptight parents to cut contact with Lillian and Emmeline. But that’s only the start of a plot that’s powerful, beautifully written, and which leads to compulsive reading.
Parts of the book are shockingly traumatic, although the author wisely avoids gratuitous detail. I wouldn’t suggest a child or sensitive teenager read this; indeed, as the main character is nearly fifty and others are older, I doubt if it would appeal even to young people in their twenties. Transita, the publisher of this book (though they are no longer in existence) was looking for novels intended for women of forty-five and above. I think they succeeded admirably with ‘The sorrow of sisters’.
While there’s undoubtedly a plot that unfolds meticulously, this is essentially a character-based book. I found Jane a very likeable and believable woman, as is Emmeline. Chas is perhaps a tad too good to be true, and Henry a very confused person with a most unpleasant past.
There’s something of a mystical element; there’s a young woman called Marguerite who doesn’t speak, and apparently doesn’t hear. But she communicates with her hands, and also with some stunning paintings and drawings. She has a special healing touch, too, and a strong sense of what is happening to the people she loves, even when they’re not there.
If you like this kind of book, I would recommend it highly. No longer in print, but it can sometimes be found second-hand.
Review copyright 2025 Sue's Book Reviews