I was not sure this was really a Rose Tremain novel at the beginning. It is narrated at first by fifteen year old Marianne when she is looking back to an affair with the much older Simon. But of course, the relationship was doomed from the very start. Although it does haunt the narrator for all her life. Her expensive education is wasted as a result.
Forward to 1963 and she's nineteen. (I was also born in 1944 - more later). She's at secretarial college in London. (did our paths cross?) But she's a poor student and it's only when she works in a department store over Christmas, expert at wrapping presents, doe she find a kind of fulfillment. She meets Hugo, their friendship is warm and funny.
They marry despite her first love always at the back of her mind. But the marriage is hurt by a reckless act by Marianne, but on they go. Despite most reviews talking about the setting in the 1950's and 60's, they forget the last part in the 70's. So after that strange introduction, the novel becomes a powerful story about how someone's life can be dominated by what looks like a teenage crush. Well, perhaps it was more than that. But the author places us right inside the mind of Marianne, which is not always a happy place to be.
It was early on that I did wonder if the story was partly auto biographical? The author is a year older than Marianne (who is the same age as me). Her character attends an all girls boarding school, at the same time that I have left an all boys grammar in London and starting at a mixed grammar in Essex. In my class seven boys and twenty one girls. Don't ask. Then we were both in London in the 1960's, although I don't actually recognise it as the same place in the book. But at least I had a job. Maybe that is the main difference.
Mrs Filling looking for her husband somewhere down the beach of Pineapple Bay. Originally from Barnes in London (that I would have called Surrey in my youth), she comes across the notorious local Babe Jude.
MISSUS MOON
Ned is eight and Missus Moon nearly a hundred. A passing friendship after Ned has seen a funeral.
THE BEST DAY OF MY EASTER HOLIDAYS
Ned is older but we are back again in Jamaica where his parents plump for an excursion led by driver Jolly Jackson. It becomes pretty hairy but they survive. But Ned's essay is only given a B by his teacher: "Egerton. Rubbish. See me."
THE POOL BOY
I guess that if, like Lady Fletcher (in Jamaica on doctor's advice but without her husband) sitting by the pool all day at a luxury hotel, you are bound to be accosted at times by its residents. But it's only after her husband arrives and they move to a bungalow by the pool that her sleep is interrupted.
THE WEEPING CHILD
A bi-annual visit to her daughter in Kingston, Jamaica for the elderly Mrs Kingston. At a party she tells a ghost story.
THE HOUSE ABOVE NEWCASTLE
Two startlingly good looking young people honeymoon at the Pineapple Bay Hotel in Jamaica. Catriona (Pussy to her friends) Fox-Coutts and her husband Boofy Fielding. Who do they see on the beach but Ned. Taking a car out into the wilderness after the rain has stopped, only to have another deluge. But at the top of the mountain they find shelter, and themselves at last.
SAUL ALONE
Narrated by Saul, nearly eighty, but he cannot speak due to a stroke. But he hears everything as his wife Ruthie holds forth beside the hotel pool, immaculate in appearance, forthright in manner. "He's been a wonderful man. (Seems like I'm dead)". They are visited by characters from other stories.
THE FIRST DECLENSION
"A suitable marriage. Really quite a remarkable marriage". Both tall, both rich. An appropriate wedding. Many years later, in middle age, Anne Shaw stays at home while her husband goes off the Barbados. No, it's actually our hotel in Kingston, Jamaica. The exchange of letters makes Anne extremely uncomfortable. "But marmalade (why she cannot go too), Latin (her daughter needs her help -no), Harrods's socks and local politics had always seemed her boundaries". But a strange unpredictable ending (see the title) when she is invited by a friend into his white Rolls Royce, jumps out and heads up Kensington Church Street (I know it so well).
SOMETHING TO TELL THE GIRLS
Miss Dee-Dee and Miss Gongers are ancient teachers at an all girls school. Both met at Cambridge before women were awarded degrees, Yes, that old. An interlude in Jamaica, stopping at Newcastle before, in-advisably, hiring an unreliable car to take them into the interior. (Gongers never drives at home). A kind of adventure.
MONIQUE
We are back in Pineapple Bay with young Ned and his parents. Also there are Lady Fletcher and her husband the judge, and that stunning Bolivian lady Mrs Santamarina. Is it she stiff as a board on the beach at night? Has Robert Shaw anything to do with it. (See above). But it's Lady Fletcher who is dispatched to see what is wrong. We never really know.
Four astronauts and two cosmonauts in a space station. That's it. The best bit, for me, was when Shaun talks about a lesson at school when a teacher explains a Velazquez painting "The Ladies in Waiting" ("Les Meninas"). But there is too much introspection for me "Examine ourselves in endless bouts of fascinated distraction", so much what they see from the windows, and dreams.
Two thirds through I thought there might be some drama when Anton finds a lump on his neck. But no. He avoids saying anything to save the mission. I should have known.