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Someone at a Distance by Dorothy Whipple – Heart wrenching Tale of Choices, a Marriage and Two Women

Someone at a Distance by Dorothy Whipple – Heart wrenching Tale of Choices, a Marriage and Two Women

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Someone at a distance by Dorothy Whipple

Someone at a Distance is the story of an ordinary family torn apart by the entry of a French woman named Louise. It is the story of trust, love and family bonds. It is the story of how to live even when the biggest tragedy strikes you on the face, unexpected.

 

Someone at a Distance is my first Persephone and I am glad I started with a Whipple. This particular book was recommended to me many times by several friends and when I read that Dorothy Whipple by J. B. Priestly as the “Jane Austen of 20th century,” I was even more curious.

 

Someone at a distance by Dorothy Whipple
Someone at a distance by Dorothy Whipple

 

This book was such a breath taking read that I kept postponing reading the last thirty pages for many days because I didn’t want the book to end. I read the novel quite a while ago, specifically on a day that began with oats and raisin bread topped with melted cheese and a huge pot of coffee filled for enough re-fills. This was such a perfect read with breakfast.

 

In the first few pages we are introduced to a regular middle-class couple, Avery and Ellen North. They live in a large comfortable house and love their son and daughter to bits. Avery is a charming and handsome man working as a publisher with a good pay. Ellen spends her time in gardening and loves the art of slow living through the routines of the day. Avery’s mother is a lonely widow who resents Ellen and alleges that she is not paying enough attention to her, even though she does care for the old lady. The old lady, not content with the attention her own family members give her, advertises  for a companion. This request is answered by a French lady, Louise, who was recently rejected by her lover for someone higher up on the social ladder. She is bitter towards life and is set on destroying happiness in the lives she comes across.

 

This book can even be called a cold war between two women though they hardly confront each other directly after the truth gets known. Ellen is the epitome of perfection in a wife while Louise is femme fatale. Louise reminds me a lot of The Bad Girl by Mario Vargas Llosa. Incidentally Louise’s favourite fictional character is Madame Bovary who inspired Llosa to model his character in the novel The Bad Girl. I love how Whipple gives a brilliant character sketch of Louise in a way that leaves a bitter taste in the reader’s mouth. Whipple is a genius at drawing the reader to subtle references to the short sightedness and trusting nature of Ellen and the manipulative mind of Louise.

 

For me, Ellen is the main character in the novel. I loved Ellen’s transformation from being happily consumed in the daily tasks of running the house to an independent woman brave enough to take life by the horns. I found two scenes in the novel particularly touching – One where Ellen stands in front of the paperwork containing financial information of the household, completely clueless on what ‘tax returns’ even means, and then slowly trudges her way through them; teaching herself the tasks she had always taken for granted. Another scene I loved is when Ellen thinks about breakfast — “Ellen turned away, sick at heart. She went into the kitchen. Breakfast. They must have breakfast. Whatever happened, you always had breakfast.” — even when everything around her is falling apart.

 

The title got me thinking for a long time. The label ‘Someone at a distance’ can be applied to each of the principal characters in the novel, in different contexts. The book presents the effect of dissolution of a marriage on a woman who was always dependent on her husband. Add to this the fact that she is a mother and hence worries constantly on how this unexpected turn of events would affect her children in the present day as well as on their personal relationships in the future. As a reader, I loved being part of Ellen’s decisions and the way she builds her life back after being struck by a violent breach of trust. I loved the way the novel ended too. A similar ending penned by another writer would have had me raising my eyebrows. But this book was just so perfect.

 

Someone at a distance by Dorothy Whipple
Someone at a distance by Dorothy Whipple

 

Hats off to Whipple’s masterful writing that engages the reader in an emotional turmoil throughout the read. This is a book I would recommend to those who do not fear being emotionally wrenched by a read and to everyone looking for a good book to pick up next.

 

Title : Someone at a Distance
Author : Dorothy Whipple
Publisher : Persephone
Published : 2008 (Originally 1958)
Language : English
Pages : 413
Rating : 5/5

View Comments (18)
    • Thank you. I hope you will pick it up soon. I found the beginning scenes a bit abrupt but after that it transformed into such an emotional read.

  • As a lover of Jane Austen novels, and having read your review of Someone at a Distance, I am convinced that I must read this book! I am a child of divorce, and think it would be interesting to experience from the perspective of someone who has been betrayed and must start life over again, independently, as my own mother did. Thank you for sharing your thoughts!

    • I am sorry to hear about that. As a book, this is an excellent read. It has a few abrupt starts, but once the flow sets in, it does capture your heart. And this is a very realistic portrayal of a woman; not like the one in movies and certain contemporary reads where the lady starts becoming the ‘unrealistically independent superwoman.’. I highly recommend the read.

  • I 100% agree with everything you’ve said in this review and Whipple was also my first Persephone. I’m planning on getting the other title they’ve published and I believe they are releasing a new short story collection by her this autumn. That is also going to my collection. If her other titles are as good as this one, she will be a favourite of mine for me 🙂

    • So lovely to know that you will be reading more of Whipple’s works. Yes, there are new titles coming out in autumn. I hope you will enjoy them just as much.

  • Thanks for this review. I have read and reviewed Dorothy Whipple in the past, but not this one – yet. I love her domestic observations. Her stories lack action but are full of what happens in life. Caroline

  • I have not read any Dorothy Whipple! I absolutely loved your review and will add this to my TBR. Isn’t it the mark of a good book when you don’t want it to end? 🙂

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