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'The Paying Guests' review by Book Club member April..

There are novels where you quite happily fall in love with the characters, and then there are ones where if you met them you would ask them what on earth were they thinking, and shake your head and sigh. And that would be a polite response.

There were many times when reading “The Paying Guests”, the latest novel by bestselling author, Sarah Waters, when I felt thoroughly aggravated by its reluctant heroine. Set in the aftermath of the First World War, a shabbily genteel widow and her daughter Frances are in reduced circumstances and are forced to rent out rooms to a young, ambitious working class couple, Lilian and Leonard – the “paying guests” whose presence is necessary but undesired. Frances, who has previously sacrificed her independence and her lover out of duty to her family, finds herself irresistibly drawn to Lilian, and their tentative friendship soon becomes a passionate love affair with unforeseen – and catastrophic – consequences.

Frances herself is a difficult character to like, and as the central protagonist, it’s hard for the reader to ultimately root for her. Whilst we could sympathise with her plight – Frances has taken responsibility for the household, and the detailed descriptions of how she channels her deep emotional turmoil into the heavy duty household chores of a ‘20’s household is highly evocative – ultimately we spend far too much time hearing her thoughts. A large proportion of the book concerns not action or indeed interaction – there is disappointingly little dialogue, considering the number of intersecting relationships at the heart of the action- but the torturous inner monologue of Frances as she dithers and frets and deliberates over what to do.

However, the relationship between Frances and Lily does cast its spell, and this is where the slow burning pace is at its strongest and most seductive; in the first third of the novel, when Frances and Lily are falling in love. Waters writes well about love and sex, and her previous novels such as “Tipping The Velvet”, “Fingersmith” and “The Night’s Watch” (which I would highly recommend) have delighted due to their detailed evocation of lesbian relationships and the meticulous re-creation of the lives and worlds of those previously obscured or written out of conventional historical narratives. Particularly beguiling, in all of her novels, is the city itself, London, which becomes more than a vivid backdrop to the action but a fully realised, intoxicating world. All the characters are well drawn and convincing, and the apt, beautifully observed and often wry descriptions are a delight.

The shift of pace and plot – from love story into crime-thriller- seemed somewhat disjointed, and whilst it’s a page turning read, unfortunately it can also be a page skimming one too. The final third of the novel is somewhat a disappointment in comparison to the first, and it’s tempting to describe the book as going out with a fizzle and a whimper rather than a bang. However, this would be somewhat unfair, as it’s really in comparison to Waters’ other works that this one ultimately disappoints – and to anyone who hasn’t yet discovered her writing, “The Paying Guests” would be an excellent introduction.

April Cursons (@charitychiccat)  


Comments

  1. I loved this book, I enjoyed the wide array of character flaws that each person owned. Focusing on the people and their relationships within a war torn Britain, presented another viewpoint from which we are able to view those times. I agree that the build up in the first half of the book was faster paced than the second, however, I personally loved the ending.

    Affinity was my favourite novel of Sarah Water's and highly recommend it to others.

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