Accidents in the Home: A Gripping Novel - Perfect for Book Clubs & Cozy Reading Nights
Accidents in the Home: A Gripping Novel - Perfect for Book Clubs & Cozy Reading Nights
Accidents in the Home: A Gripping Novel - Perfect for Book Clubs & Cozy Reading Nights

Accidents in the Home: A Gripping Novel - Perfect for Book Clubs & Cozy Reading Nights

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Description

A powerful literary debut chronicling a year in the life of one thoroughly modern familyClare Verey, a twenty-nine-year-old mother of three, bakes her own bread and grinds her own spices. She has a comfortable home in the suburbs and a devoted husband. Why is it, then, that when her best friend's lover appears in her life he has the power to invert her world? Why is the desire for more never satisfied?So begins Accidents in the Home, a novel that exposes the emotional underbelly of a modern-day family. Clare's narrative is deftly intertwined with the stories of her extended family: her mother, Marian, the clever daughter of a Dostoevsky scholar whose husband leaves her for a beautiful young art student; Clare's half brother, Toby, a dreamy boy who prefers to view life through the lens of a camera; her troubled younger half sister, Tamsin, who develops an apparatus of taboos and rituals to restore order to her chaotic past. In the world Tessa Hadley has created, family is no longer a steady foundation but a complex web of marriages, divorces, half siblings, and stepchildren that expands with every new connection and betrayal. Accidents in the Home offers a startling, intimate portrait of family life in our time.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
I hope Tessa Hadley keeps writing because I do love her novels. The characters she writes about are such a mix--strong yet frail. Usually the focus is on women--friends, mothers and daughters, sisters, etc. In this there is a brief section that tells a part of the story through a brother's point of view. But he is not the main event. These people are so very human, so apt to make mistakes. The novel doesn't coddle them, and yet we don't necessarily hate them for their missteps. Still, many of us have made decisions in our lives that set us off on a path we might not have chosen if we could go back and relive that time. It seems some of Hadley's protagonists do that too, and yet the novel is not a tragedy. Accidents do happen after all.