Home > Book Review, Genre, historic, Length - average but on the longer side > Book Review: A Spell of Winter by Helen Dunmore

Book Review: A Spell of Winter by Helen Dunmore

Book Review: A Spell of Winter by Helen DunmoreSummary:
Cathy and her brother Rob live with their emotionally distant grandfather on family land in England because her mother left, and her father died in a mental institution. Cathy and Rob seek refuge with each other against the world, but World War I won’t let them keep the world at bay forever.

Review:
I generally enjoy controversial books, and I heard that this historical fiction included the always controversial plot point of incest. The short version of my review is: it’s amazing how boring a book about incest and WWI can actually be. For the longer version, read on.

The book is told non-linearly in what appears to be an attempt to build suspense. The constant jumping with very few reveals for quite some time, though, just led to my own frustration.

I was similarly frustrated by the fact that Cathy’s childish interpretation of her father’s mental illness never progresses. She never moves from a child’s understanding to an adult’s understanding. This lack of progress gave a similar stagnant feeling to the book.

Of course, what the book is best-known for is the incest between Cathy and Rob. I found the scenes of incest neither shocking nor eliciting of any emotion. There are scenes where Cathy and Rob discuss how “unfair” it is that they cannot have children and society will judge them. But then again there are scenes that imply that Rob took advantage of Cathy. Well, which is it? It’s not that I demand no gray areas, but the existence of gray areas in such a topic would best be supported by a main character with insight. Cathy remains childlike throughout the book. Indeed, I think the characterization of Cathy is what holds the whole book back. Because the book is Cathy’s perspective, this lack in her characterization impacts the whole thing. What could be either a horrifying or a thought-provoking book instead ends up being simply meh. A lot of time is spent saying essentially nothing.

That said, I did enjoy how the author elicits the setting. I truly felt as if I was there in that cold and often starving rural England. I felt as if I could feel the cold in my bones. That beauty of setting is something that many writers struggle with.

Overall, this book read as gray and dull to me as the early 20th century English countryside it is set in. Readers with a vested interest in all varieties of WWI historic fiction and those who enjoy a main character with a childlike inability to provide insight are the most likely to enjoy this book. Those looking for a shocking, horrifying, or thought-provoking read should look elsewhere.

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3 out of 5 stars

Length: 320 pages – average but on the longer side

Source: PaperBackSwap

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Counts For:
Bottom of TBR Pile Challenge

  1. February 25, 2016 at 6:18 pm

    Oh no! Given the first line, I’m surprised you even gave this three stars. It does seem like a book would have to be impressively bad to make those topics boring!

    • February 26, 2016 at 8:57 am

      It’s interesting you say that! My initial reaction on GoodReads (I write a sentence or two to help me remember initial thoughts later) was something along the lines of “maybe 2 stars.” I ultimately decided to be generous and go with three because a) I was waffling and I’d rather err on the side of kindness b) I just really didn’t have very strong feelings one way or the other about the book, so I decided it should land in the meh category. There could definitely be a strong argument made for two though!

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