UKBookland Reviewer Community

Have you read a UKUnpublished Author's book recently, why not review it here.

All the books published by UKUnpublished will be put here for your reviews.

If you can't see the book you want, search for the Author name, book title, or by ISBN - Please enter the ISBN in this format, xxx-x-xxxxx-xxx-x, in the search box in the top left corner of the page.

If you would like to see a topic discussed, or notice a book is missing, please email info@ukunpublished.co.uk, and we will do what we can.


To make a comment

You need to click on where it says 'x' comments (x being a number), then write your comment in the box, and below, in the drop down box, you can use one of the options there if you normally do blogging in one of those ways, or you can decide to use Anonymous.
The preferred option is for you to click on Name/URL, and then you can enter your name (if you have a website, you can put it in the URL box, but if not, just leave it blank.

Saturday, 2 January 2010

Change and Changeability by John Scully

Paperback ISBN: 978-1-84944-009-7
Paperback RRP: £12.49


UKBookland Price : £8.99 including FREE Standard UK Delivery - available here.

Mobipocket eBook available here for 6 Euros.
Mobipocket eBook ISBN: 978-1-84944-029-5


As Jack Russell, a newly-retired academic Ceramist, attempts to write a novel he learns that his younger sister, Susan, is separating from her husband, Martin, and setting up house with a young painter, Mary. This change greatly surprises him and his wife Jill. They subsequently meet Mary whom they find quite charming. Martin seeks their sympathy.
The two themes of writing a novel and dealing with a family problem dominate Jack’s life as he and Jill go about their normal life, meeting friends and visiting relatives. Progress with his book is slow. He finds himself continually distracted when he tries to write, unable to avoid thinking instead about various writers, about when he was young, and about the consequences of ageing.
Martin is arrested for sexually assaulting young children. He later commits suicide before his trial. In considering this tragic sequence of events Jack sees his failure to understand the breakup of Susan and Martin as typical of much in life: one never knows the full story of anything. There are always gaps. Things are never constant: situations and people’s attitudes are forever changing. That is also true of novels. Such reflections result in his feeling optimistic about finishing his novel.
Change and Changeability presents a very sympathetic portrait of a warm, modern, ageing man, engagingly uncertain about many things.

No comments:

Post a Comment