Book Review – The Summer House Party by Caro Fraser #20BooksofSummer2025

About the Book

In the gloriously hot summer of 1936, a group of people meet at a country house party. Within three years, England will be at war, but for now, time stands still.

Dan Ranscombe is clever and good-looking, but he resents the wealth and easy savoir faire of fellow guest, Paul Latimer. Surely a shrewd girl like Meg Slater would see through that, wouldn’t she? And what about Diana, Paul’s beautiful sister, Charles Asher, the Jewish outsider, Madeleine, restless and dissatisfied with her role as children’s nanny? And artist Henry Haddon, their host, no longer young, but secure in his power as a practised seducer.

As these guests gather, none has any inkling the choices they make will have fateful consequences, lasting through the war and beyond. Or that the first unforeseen event will be a shocking death.

Format: Hardback (512 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 6th April 2017 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

The Summer House Party is book 5 of my 20 Books of Summer 2025. Shamefully, it has been on my bookshelf since the publishers sent me a copy back in 2017. It was only once I started reading the book that I remembered I’d read the sequel, Summer of Love, in 2018. That book focuses on the post-war lives of the characters, including those who are only children in this book.

I remarked in my review of Summer of Love that there were spoilers from this book, even in the blurb, and I now realise why the consequences of some of the events in this book – including an extremely significant one – felt under-developed. Presumably, it was always intended there should be a sequel. I don’t think I would be alone in finding it frustrating for some things to be left hanging at the end of this book.

I confess that for a lot of the book I found very little to like about many of the characters. Their lives seemed very self-idulgent and remote from those of ordinary people. Diana’s hedonistic lifestyle is a whirlwind of cocktail parties, boozy lunches and night clubs. It’s all ‘simply too divine’. She’s pretty free with her sexual favours too. Conversely her brother Paul is a straightlaced and rather pompous individual who eulogizes male friendship, has a very dismissive attitude to women and expresses views which border on the anti-Semitic. Dan is a philanderer who views every woman as a potential conquest so his professions of love are rather difficult to believe. Meg comes across as very naive and eager to please. For some unfathomable reason, she idolises Paul. Sonia, wife of artist Henry Haddon, is the perfect hostess but has a strangely distant relationship with her young daughter Avril who is invariably consigned to the care of a nanny. Sonia seems unable to see that Avril’s frequent tantrums are a result of this neglect, especially since Avril’s father is usually cloistered away in his study.

The days consist of a seemingly endless round of cocktails, long lunches and idle chitchat with a few games of tennis thrown in. Events in Europe (this is 1936) seem far away with more concern given to the difiiculty of finding reliable servants than what may be on the horizon. The only concession to world events is Charles Asher’s announcement that he is off to fight in the Spanish Civil War, greeted with particular dismay by Paul. During the house party at Woodbourne House there’s a lot of flirtation and late night knocks at bedroom doors. The relationships that form that summer, including the love triangle that is at the heart of the book, have repercussions that persist for years.

Meg, finding herself in a rather sterile marriage, struggles with the competing demands of love and responsibility. Trying to ‘have her cake and eat it’ means deceiving those around her in order to find snatched moments of happiness, usually followed by intense feelings of guilt on her part. Despite the risk of discovery, she is unable to find the courage to commit wholly one way or the other. It’s a situation that cannot continue, with tragic consequences.

Once war breaks out, I found the characters became more appealing as we see other sides to their characters. Sonia discovers life can be lived without servants doing everything for you and rises to the challenge of keeping the household supplied with food. Woodbourne House becomes a place of refuge as German bombing raids on London intensify. Dan and Paul demonstrate courage whilst on active service. And Meg experiences first-hand what many in London are suffering leaving her with an intense feeling of displacement.

The book perfectly captures the milieu of upper class society in the years before World War Two, epitomised by the carefree atmosphere of a summer house party in an idyllic setting. The travails of the war years intervene bringing with them a sense that some social changes are irreversible (even if Sonia does still yearn for the days when a servant would draw her bath for her). The book demonstrates the very complicated nature of human relationships. Indeed, to quote from Sir Walter Scott’s poem Marmion, ‘Oh what a tangled we we weave, when first we practice to deceive’.

Caro Fraser sadly died in April 2020.

In three words: Romantic, engaging, evocative
Try something similar: The Light Years by Elizabeth Jane Howard

About the Author

Caro Fraser was the author of the Caper Court novels, based on her own experiences as a lawyer.

The daughter of George MacDonald Fraser, author of the Flashman novels, she died in April 2020.

Book Review – Green Ink by Stephen May

About the Book

David Lloyd George is at Chequers for the weekend with his mistress Frances Stevenson, fretting about the fact that his involvement in selling public honours is about to be revealed by one Victor Grayson. Victor is a bisexual hedonist and former firebrand socialist MP turned secret-service informant. Intent on rebuilding his profile as the leader of the revolutionary Left, he doesn’t know exactly how much of a hornet’s nest he’s stirred up. Doesn’t know that this is, in fact, his last day.

No one really knows what happened to Victor Grayson – he vanished one night in late September 1920, having threatened to reveal all he knew about the prime minister’s involvement in selling honours. Was he murdered by the British government? By enemies in the socialist movement (who he had betrayed in the war)? Did he fall in the Thames drunk? Did he vanish to save his own life, and become an antiques dealer in Kent?

Whatever the truth, Green Ink imagines what might have been with brio, humour and humanity; and is a reminder that the past was once as alive as we are today.

Format: Hardback (288 pages) Publisher: Swift Press
Publication date: 13th March 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

As in the author’s very enjoyable book, Sell Us The Rope, which concerned the young Stalin’s visit to London in May 1907, Green Ink is based on a real historical event, namely the disappearance of Victor Grayson on 28th September 1920. The circumstances of his disappearance remain unknown to this day and have been the subject of much speculation over the years. This is the author’s imagined answer to the mystery.

Told over the course of the day of Victor’s disappearance, the book gives the reader a vivid insight into a man who lived life on the edge – a drink, drug and sex-fuelled edge. The author assembles a cast of people who might have had reason to welcome Victor’s disappearance. These include Prime Minister David Lloyd George, fearful Victor may reveal his involvement in corruption, a spurned former lover and someone who has very personal reasons to resent Victor’s volte-face from passionate opponent of Britain’s entry into the First World War to enthusiastic advocate. And perhaps the memoir Victor is writing might disclose information the British government would rather remained secret. (Behind the scenes they’re doing quite a lot of information gathering themselves.)

This is London in the aftermath of the First World War and its consequences are graphically depicted. As Victor follows his fellow drinkers – ‘sad-eyed men and their long-suffering friends’ – out of a pub into the streets of London he sees ‘men muttering to themselves or hopping through the damp fog on crutches’. The streets are populated by ‘the blind, the crippled, the halt and the traumatised. Men chanting softly to themselves like so many confused monks.’ There is one particularly memorable scene in a cinema which brings home the devastation war can wreak on the human body.

I loved some of the character descriptions such as this one of actor and theatre producer Maundy Gregory. ‘He’d be an impressive figure if it didn’t look like subsidence was affecting his face, cheeks and jowls slithering to wards a flabby neck like a slow-moving mudslide.’

The book contains some explicit sex scenes which I found a little too anatomical to be erotic. There is also quite a bit of swearing which didn’t bother me but might some readers. On the other hand, there’s an infectious wit and verve about the writing which makes the book highly entertaining.

The circumstances of Victor’s disappearance, as imagined by the author, are dramatic but have an element of poetic justice. Of course, it doesn’t claim to be the truth and in a clever sleight of hand we learn exactly why that might not be the case. Oh, and the book’s title? ‘Everyone knows only the security services use green ink for their memoranda.’

I received a review copy courtesy of Swift Press.

In three words: Clever, witty, engrossing
Try something similar: Precipice by Robert Harris

About the Author

Stephen May is the author of six novels including Life! Death! Prizes! which was shortlisted for the Costa Novel Award and The Guardian Not The Booker Prize. He has also been shortlisted for the Wales Book of the Year and is a winner of the Media Wales Reader’s Prize. He has also written plays, as well as for television and film. He lives in West Yorkshire.

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