Before you read this embarrassingly glowing review, I need to clear up any misapprehension. Its author is not a relation!
(Although confusion can arise - even for me - when I spot tweets from him, or find his emails in my inbox.) My own son - known to friends, relations AND his parents - as Tom, is also a writer! Called Thomas Williams for publishing purposes, my son is the author of Viking Britain, Viking London and the yet to be published Lost Realms (the working title of a history of the lesser known Anglo Saxon Kingdoms.)
Review reposted from Tom Williams' blog Writing About Writing
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"I’m not a huge fan of Romantic Fiction, so the blurb for this book was not enticing:
Jane thinks he sees her as shallow and ill-educated. Theo thinks she sees him
as a snob, stuffy and out of touch.
Within the ancient precincts of the university the first encounter between the
conference planner and the academic is accidental and unpromising. Just as well
there’s no reason for them ever to meet again.
It
looks like the beginning of every trite and predictable chicklit romance. “My
god, Jane, with your glasses you look quite intelligent.” “And you, Theo, once
you’ve had a style makeover, could be the man of my dreams.” But I have “met”
Gilli Allan online and I know how much she puts into her books which she
prefers to think of as “contemporary women’s fiction” rather than Romance. So I
snuck a copy onto my Kindle and decided to find out just how bad it could be.
And
the answer is: not bad at all. In fact, it’s rather good. Her characters are
properly realised with back-stories that are entirely credible and rather sad,
but both Theo and Jane are trying to move on with their lives and overcome
their emotional issues. They are active and engaging agents in their own lives,
rather than the creations of a writer who knows that the path of true love can
never run smooth until the lovers have overcome one or two largely imaginary
obstacles to their happiness. In fact, neither Jane nor Theo is “looking for
love”. Indeed, both are actively fending off unwanted suitors while
concentrating on making successes of other aspects of their lives.
Jane
is starting her own business as a conference organiser and Theo is trying to
climb the academic ladder as an archaeologist. Gilli Allan knows a lot about
both conference organising and archaeology and the details of the lives of the
two protagonists are interesting and convincing.
As
their work means that they begin to run into each other more and more often
(she is organising a conference at the Cambridge college he is working at) so
an unlikely friendship forms. Will it blossom into love, or will one of the
various other potential romantic partners derail the affair before it has even
started?
Gilli
is a member of the Romantic Novelists Association, so a happy ending is
more-or-less guaranteed. (One of the reasons I generally dislike Romantic
Fiction is because most readers and writers consider that a happy ending is
required.) Even so, I was not sure things were going to work out. The
characters are complex, the back-stories elaborate. The story is told in the
present tense, an affectation that usually annoys me but which works here
because it delineates the main story from the quantities of back-story (past
tense) that could otherwise get very confusing. There’s also quite a lot of
plot. Actually, there are so many sub-plots I began to lose count, though I was
never confused. All the characters, even the most minor, are clearly drawn so
that even I couldn’t muddle them up. And Gilli keeps the plots so interesting.
One rather important one centres on some sharp practice in a town planning
department and the provision that should or shouldn’t be made for an
archaeological survey before a supermarket is built. I’ve sat in on the odd
local government planning controversy and it takes real skill to make them
remotely interesting, but Gilli Allan does.
I’ve
found this a difficult book to review because there is so much good stuff in
it, but it seems to be scattered all over the place. It is a measure of the
author’s skill that she manages to pull so many disparate strands together into
a highly readable and wholly enjoyable book.
I do
strongly recommend this, even if you hate Romantic Fiction."
Thank you Tom. I am indebted to you for this review.
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