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Jessica Dettmann

Auteur de How to Be Second Best

5+ oeuvres 55 utilisateurs 2 critiques

Œuvres de Jessica Dettmann

How to Be Second Best (2018) 29 exemplaires
Without Further Ado (2023) 10 exemplaires
This Has Been Absolutely Lovely (2021) 8 exemplaires
There's No Such Book (2022) 6 exemplaires
This Has Been Absolutely Lovely (2023) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Thanks for the Mammaries (2009) — Contributeur — 24 exemplaires

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A contemporary retelling of Much Ado About Nothing set in Sydney. Willa works for a family publishing company -- for most of the eight years she’s been there, she’s been the only employee who isn’t part of the Smith family, but her cousin Imogen is now the receptionist and going out with one of Gladstone Smith’s sons.

I loved reading this! I really liked the portrayal of Willa’s friendships, and how vividly the novel captures the different aspects of Willa’s life. Some of the descriptions made me laugh, or at least, grin with delight. And the way the story loosely retells Much Ado meant I kept wondering what was going to happen next -- was it about to incorporate something from Shakespeare’s play, and if so, would it follow it or twist it?

I was all set for this to be one of my favourite books, but the ending left me feeling a bit flat. Not disappointed by what happened, I concluded, but by the way it didn’t show more of what Willa’s life was now like. In contrast to all that had come before, it made the ending feel a bit abrupt. But I suppose my disappointment is an indication of how invested I’d become.

“Where would you put him on the Ollie-scale?” They liked to rank people as better or worse than her ex, Ollie, but it wasn’t always easy, because Ollie had been insidious. Ollie was like climate change: for a long time it was easy enough to ignore his downsides, to not do anything about him, even though deep down she’d known things weren’t sustainable and were worsening rapidly. Until one day, instead of catastrophic floods, devastating fires and starving polar bears floating on tiny ice cubes, there were three of his undergraduate Performance Studies Studies students asleep, naked, in their bed when she got home from work.

It was a surefire way to annoy Ewan, going on about how hot his brother was. “He’s very easy on the eye. I’m only human.”
“Even though he’s a grumpy bastard who wouldn’t get a joke if it was injected into his arm?” Ewan shook his head in disbelief. “Willa, you contain hidden shallows.”
“One person’s grumpy bastard is another’s brooding heartthrob.”

This non-specific weekend report — ‘quiet’ and ‘nice’ — was not how their conversations went. Kat was talking like they were being recorded by ASIO. This was horrible. Stilted. It felt like talking to a bad fan-fiction version of her best friend, written by some random on the internet.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Herenya | Oct 29, 2023 |
This Has Been Absolutely Lovely, Jessica Dettmann’s sophomore novel, was my first read for the new year, and happily, an ideal selection.

Witty, warm, sharp and sincere, this is a story of responsibilities, regrets, secrets, anxieties, dreams and dysfunction, as the family of Annie Jones, which includes her three adult children, their partners and offspring, her ex-husband, and the man he left her for, gathers under the same roof for Annie’s father’s funeral in the days before Christmas.

No family is without complications, but at this particular moment, Annie’s can be said to have more complications than most. Though she had imagined that with her father’s passing she would finally be free to pursue her own dreams, as the week unfolds, Annie begins to doubt that escaping the needs of her family will ever a possibility.

I quickly became invested in the characters of This Has Been Absolutely Lovely, even though I had little in common with them. They are realistic and nuanced, as are the dynamics between them. Annie garnered my complete sympathy, her daughter, Molly, not so much. I felt sorry for Simon’s wife, Diana, while Annie’s friend, Jane, made me laugh.

Taking place in the northern coastal suburbs of Sydney over the Christmas period, the details of the setting are very familiar, as I spent several summer holidays with cousins who lived in the same area. We too made the daily pilgrimages to the beach, ate meals in the back yard, and played hide and seek among the plumbago.

Dettmann’s writing is perceptive, tender and poignant, deftly portraying the complexities of the modern family, and exploring themes of choice, resentment, expectation, freedom, and creativity. An absolutely lovely read.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
shelleyraec | Jan 5, 2021 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
5
Aussi par
1
Membres
55
Popularité
#295,340
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
2
ISBN
18

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