The phrase ‘Never judge a book by its cover’ is something that I mentioned a while ago and at the time I discussed how inappropriate it
is when considering books. The image and the general design of a cover
generally tends to be the thing that catches a person’s eye and make them stop
and take another look at it. To me, a more relevant phrase would be to ‘Never
judge a book by its blurb’. A little description on the back can make or break
a sale if it isn't engaging or pitched to the correct person. I have written a
few of my own for various projects and know how tough it can be trying to
explain what the book is about without giving away any major details. But I am
also a book consumer and have read plenty of blurbs, basing my decision on
whether or not to actually read a book on those little descriptions on the
back.
Blurbs seem to fall into a few different categories:
- The CliffsNotes- telling you the story in a few words.
- The Misdirection-telling you PART of the story without revealing that the book will go a completely different direction from what it is implying.
- The Spoiler- a major plot point is revealed on the blurb but will not be revealed in the story until much later.
- The Enigma- which tells you nothing.
Of course there are variations of these themes and I do not
doubt that you have come across others yourself. For example, I read a book a few years
ago which implied that a major plot point was going to take place and be
central to the book. It happened in the last quarter and was actually not that
important to the story as a whole, making the blurb a mixture of the
misdirection and the spoiler.
Personally, I am of the opinion that a good blurb tells you
something about the story so you can make a choice about whether the genre and
the topic are something you want to pick up and read. The Enigma drives me
crazy. I hate going into something completely blind, especially if I will be
spending money on it. In contrast, I do enjoy the Misdirection when it comes to
blurbs because it keeps things fresh and, when the twist is revealed, can come
as a pleasant surprise, providing added depth to characters and plot. Of
course, a lot can depend on the mood of the reader at the time and the
Misdirection can seriously backfire when not handled properly in text.
Which leads me to a book I have recently re-read which uses
one of these blurbs to great effect. Love
Comes Tumbling by Denise Deegan.
Now, normally I would give you a vague outline of the plot but considering this
blog started with a brief analysis of blurbs, I feel it is only fair to
actually share said blurb with you so that you understand what I am talking
about.
Lucy Arigho is not the sort of woman to be swept off her feet…
So it’s completely out
of character for her to race a man in traffic…and even more unusual when they
meet again and she is entranced by the driver, a writer called Greg Millar.
Within eight weeks she
is seriously considering Greg’s pleas that she marry him and wondering if she
can take on his two motherless children. But before she can make a decision
about becoming part of Greg’s world, events plunge her right into it-at the
deep end. Lucy’s careful existence is turned upside-down and she has to face
the fact that she doesn’t really know the man whose life has so overwhelmed
hers.
Love Comes Tumbling is
a powerful, gripping and original story about what happens when the craziness
of falling in love ends and the craziness of real life begins.
A fairly standard plot, yes? So where does the
‘misdirection’ part come in?
I ran this blurb past a friend of mine (who hasn’t read it)
and asked them what they thought was going to happen. Their response was to ask
me if this book was a Fifty Shade of Grey clone. Which this is not.
(For a very funny exploration of Fifty Shades of Grey, please read this blog. I promise you will not regret it)
When I picked up this book (on one of my ‘I’ve run out of
books I will now raid everybody else’s bookcase’ sprees) I was convinced this
was going to be an incredibly cheesy piece of chick-lit. Now I don’t mind
chick-lit…when it has been written well. However, I do get frustrated by the
focus on the protagonists and their attempt to find a man and live happily ever
after because their lives are so unfulfilled at this point. But that is a whole
other argument for a whole other day.
So, what exactly is
the plot and why has this book affected me so much?
Well we are told a lot in the blurb so I will try to keep
this brief and without spoilers as much as possible and will warn you ahead of
time if we are about to leave the ‘Spoiler free’ zone.
Lucy Arigho is a graphic designer and heads up a design
business with Fint, her gay best friend in Ireland (successful woman…of COURSE
she has a gay best friend). She was engaged to be married but lost her fiancé
in a car accident the year before. So, of course, when she spots someone
driving dangerously it pisses her off. So much so that she tells him off and
then proceeds to speed up to get rid of him, not realising that she is doing
the exact thing she was condemning this guy for. Ooops.
And then she realises that this guy is going the same place
she is. Double ooops.
And he is the reason her company is being called in for a
design job in the first place. Is it possible to just start the day over?
Greg is interested and starts pursuing her, and Lucy is
struggling to remember that she is mourning the dead fiancé, especially when
Greg sympathises and shares his own experiences. He is a widower and the father
of two young children who he had to more or less bring up on his own (with help
from a nanny).
The two date, he meets her family and Lucy is swept away by
his spontaneity and lust for life. She’s happy for the first time in ages and
the two get engaged.
All of this happens within the first three chapters because
the bulk of this story is not about this couple falling in love, but rather about what happens afterwards, as described
in the blurb. So, where do we go from here?
Lucy has to get to know Greg’s children, something that she
doesn’t do until the couple are engaged. She realises pretty quickly that this
was a mistake and does her best to get to know Greg’s family. His brother is
pretty accepting, but the nanny and the children are not. Toby is five and the
quickest to warm to Lucy but Rachel hates her.
‘Aha!’ I hear you say. ‘This is a story about her struggle
to find her place in this family and the book will end with the children loving
her after all of her struggles and she will think everything is worth it.’
Well…kind of. The step-parent is hardly a new phenomenon,
and various films and books do talk about the struggle between children
learning to accept a new family member and adults who suddenly find that they
need to learn how to be parents. I’m not going to pretend that I am either a
step-parent myself or that I have ever had one, but I do love how Lucy’s attempts
to connect with the children are not always correct and her failures are not
always because the children won’t accept her efforts. At one point, Lucy
teaches Toby to ride his bike to distract him when Rachel has a friend over and
she realises later that she has overstepped her boundaries. Learning to ride a
bike is a milestone and she does not discuss it with Greg before doing this.
There is no yelling, no argument. A big deal isn’t even made of this. Lucy just
recognises Greg’s disappointment and tries to find a way to make it up to him.
But this is not the main plot of the story.
Greg starts to act strangely. His spontaneity and energy,
which Lucy fell in love with, are starting to get out of control. He will enter
a room and get distracted easily, forgetting why he was there or why he needed
something in the first place. He will go out and party with strangers,
forgetting to tell anybody where he is and do some things that Lucy considers
crazy, like change his car or say something that nobody can understand. At one
point, he actually frightens everyone when he does some dangerous driving along
a narrow mountain road and nobody knows what is happening. The children are
abandoned to the care of the nanny and Lucy doesn’t know where she fits in
because she doesn’t have Greg as a buffer. She tries to balance her work and
home life, but is quickly getting distracted by Greg’s strange behaviour, which
escalates when he fires the nanny and disappears, leaving Lucy to take care of
children who do not really want her and has no connection to, while her
business partner gets more frustrated, demanding her return to work in time for
a big contract.
‘Aha! So this is going to be a thriller disguised as a
romance?’
Errrr…no.
When Greg returns he is given an ultimatum. Stop what he’s
doing or Lucy is leaving. He does…and once again, she finds the man she fell in
love with. But he’s confused. The writing he has been doing makes no sense. He
cannot remember some of the things he has done and slowly becomes more and more
withdrawn, leaving Lucy completely confused and stressed out.
It is Lucy’s sister who is her saving grace as both a parent
and a former doctor. She is able to help Lucy cope with the children and, after
hearing about Greg, suggests that there may actually be something wrong with
him.
Some of you might actually recognise these symptoms but for
those of you who don’t, I am going to leave the plot there because this is the
point where things get interesting. Lucy has more or less been thrown into the
deep end and the rest of the book consists of her trying to find her feet and,
more importantly, her place in this family whose foundations have been shaken.
One of the major things going for this book is the
characterisation of Lucy, Greg and the children. Lucy could easily have become
incredibly whiny and ignorant but she is established as a very capable and
intelligent human being who does crumble a bit under the pressure. Which is
when the extended cast come into play. You get the sense of a life with Lucy.
That she has friends and family to support her and who want to support her as
much as they can, even if they don’t have the full story yet. Fint’s role as
business partner and friend does play a big role in the middle of this when
Lucy has to focus on caring for the children rather than returning to work and
we see the business partner getting frustrated and angry before the friend
realises that something is wrong. That is not easily portrayed when the story
is being told in the first person.
The children could also have gone down the stereotypical
route, but we are given the picture of two very different people who are
children. Rachel, the oldest and the one who is most hostile towards Lucy, has
to slowly warm up to her and most of that happens off page with her growing
connection to Lucy’s family. It takes time. Toby is the youngest who has no
connection to his deceased mother and therefore more accepting. They have their
own personalities, their own likes and dislikes and Deegan makes it clear just
how much of an outsider Lucy is and exactly what she has to do to become part
of their lives and it is much harder than imagined.
At this point I would like to bring up one of my favourite
things about this book. It would have been very easy to just write this book as
Lucy struggling to become part of this established family, but Deegan also
makes her ask a very difficult question and does not shy away from the answer
or her struggle to figure it out. As we have established, something is wrong
with Greg and it is something that severely affected his behaviour. Their engagement
happened not long after their initial meeting, which is around the same time that
these symptoms started. So does Lucy actually love him or has she fallen in
love with a list of symptoms?
Again, the idea of someone not being who you thought they
were is not very original but I found that the reasoning behind it was. This
isn’t a case of Greg hiding himself. This is something he cannot control and
doesn’t fully understand. This wasn’t a deliberate choice but Lucy still goes
to his brother to ask questions and figure out how much of what she knows is
the man and how much is a symptom of something far greater. His answers are
very quickly brushed over but at the end of the day, Lucy has to watch and wait
to meet Greg Millar long after she puts on the engagement ring. To me, that is one of the most compelling elements of the story.
Not everyone is happy with this and Greg and Lucy do
encounter a lot of opposition from people for one reason or another. However,
their intentions and reasons are all very understandable and you can see where
they are coming from. And that is something Deegan does well here. These people
are not bad or horrible or anything vaguely resembling evil. They are concerned
and that sometimes leads to a bad decision.
So the blurb is right. Lucy is thrown into Greg’s world and
she does struggle. But the reasons behind this struggle and the results are
things that are not mentioned and remain central to the plot. If the blurb is
like a guide or a map, this book is like someone taking you down a completely
different road, driving you through beautiful countryside and buying you an amazing meal in a town
you had never been in before.
You will still reach your destination, but the journey is a
hell of a lot more satisfying.
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