Book Review – Shy Creatures by Clare Chambers @wnbooks

About the Book

Shy Creatures by Clare Chambers

In all failed relationships there is a point that passes unnoticed at the time, which can later be identified as the beginning of the decline. For Helen it was the weekend that the Hidden Man came to Westbury Park.

Croydon, 1964. Helen Hansford is in her thirties and an art therapist in a psychiatric hospital where she has been having a long love affair with a charismatic, married doctor.

One spring afternoon they receive a call about a disturbance from a derelict house not far from Helen’s home. A mute, thirty-seven-year-old man called William Tapping, with a beard down to his waist, has been discovered along with his elderly aunt. It is clear he has been shut up in the house for decades, but when it emerges that William is a talented artist, Helen is determined to discover his story.

Format: Hardcover (400 pages) Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Publication date: 29th August 2024 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

I first heard about this book when I attended a recording of BBC Radio 4’s Bookclub at which Clare talked about her previous book, Small Pleasures. That was a book I absolutely loved so I approached Shy Creatures with a mixture of trepidation and high expectation. I needn’t have worried because she has created another wonderful story.

Clare is an author who seems incapable of creating one-dimensional characters. Take Gil, the psychiatrist with whom Helen has been having an affair for the past three years. He’s attractive – and knows it – and the sort of man who can’t help playing on it. He’s cheating on his wife and is rather economical with the truth when it comes to the state of his marriage. Sounds a bit of a cad, doesn’t he? But the elements of his character that make him so charismatic make him a psychiatrist who can create a real connection with his patients. And he has a more enlightened attitude to treating mental illness than many of his peers, believing talking therapy is more effective than filling them up with drugs. It’s why he championed Helen’s art therapy as a legitimate form of treatment although, of course, he may have had secondary motives as well.

Helen is wrapped up in an affair that she finds hard to leave behind yet knows is wrong. She’s fairly clear-eyed that she and Gil view things differently. ‘She realised that, for Gil, intensity had always been more important than permanence, whereas she had wanted something lasting’. Yet a shock discovery still takes her by surprise. I really liked Helen. I admired her patience, her openmindness and the empathy she shows towards her patients, many of whom have been written off by society.

Small Pleasures was set in the 1950s, whereas Shy Creatures takes us forward to 1964. It’s a time of change, including in the attitude to the treatment of mental illness with the first glimpses of the idea of care in the community rather than shutting people away in asylums. As always, the author brilliantly evokes the period through the food people eat, the films and television programmes they watch.

As the author reveals, the character of William is inspired by a true story but she has given his story an entirely different trajectory to the real life case. Cleverly, it unfolds in reverse chronological order so it’s only towards the end of the book that we learn the reason why William was kept away from the world for so many years. Although born out of love and a desire to protect him from the risk of discovery, his isolation has had a profound impact on him not just physically but psychologically.

Discovering he has a talent for drawing, Helen sets out to help him return to the outside world through the medium of art. It’s a slow process. At the same time, she starts to delve into his past seeking anyone who can shed light on his story. What she discovers is something dark but it also results in an entirely unexpected act of generosity that is in effect repayment of a debt.

Small Pleasures ended with a tragedy. (That’s not a spoiler as it’s revealed in the opening pages.) In comparison, although nothing is spelled out, the final chapter of Shy Creatures left me with a feeling of hope.

In three words: Moving, insightful, tender
Try something similar: The Land in Winter by Andrew Miller


About the Author

Author Clare Chambers

Clare Chambers is the author of ten novels. Small Pleasures, published in 2020, was her first work of fiction in ten years and became a word-of-mouth hit on publication. It was selected for BBC2 Between the Covers book club and for Radio 4 Book at Bedtime, and was chosen as Book of the Year by The Times, the Evening Standard, Daily Telegraph, Spectator, Metro, Red and Good Housekeeping. Small Pleasures also won Pageturner of the Year Award at the British Book Awards and was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction. Clare Chambers lives in Kent.

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Book Review – Meadowlands Dawn by Jo Beall @Epoque_Press

About the Book

Imprisoned by the apartheid regime in South Africa, Verity Saunders endures the daily degradation of her incarceration whilst coming to terms with the disappearance of her activist lover, Tariq Randeree.

Thirty years later, Verity sets out to uncover the truth about her past and to confront those who brutalised and betrayed her. As secrets are exposed she learns that in order to truly heal she must embrace the path of forgiveness.

Format: ebook (193 pages) Publisher: époque press
Publication date: 30th October 2024 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

From its very first line, Meadowlands Dawn plunges the reader into the nightmare world of being a political prisoner in apartheid South Africa during the 1970s and 1980s when militant resistance to the regime was at its height provoking the authorities to respond with brutal crackdowns on those involved.

Following her capture whilst acting as decoy for a mission, Verity is placed in solitary confinement under Section 29 of the Internal Security Act, legislation which allowed for indefinite detention. ‘No trial, no visitors, no letters, no parcels, no timepiece, no reading matter, no recourse to lawyers, no charges brought, no end in sight.’ From her fetid cell she is taken for exhausting interrogation sessions and is subjected to intimidation and physical abuse. Some of the latter has life-changing consequences. From her cell, she can sometimes hear other inmates undergoing torture. Although she tries to stay strong and resist providing the information the authorities seek, her imprisonment takes a psychological toll and she reaches breaking point.

Thirty years later, following the death of her husband after a long and happy marriage, Verity returns to South Africa in an attempt to try to discover what happened to her fellow activists, in particular her lover Tariq Randeree . She clings to the hope that he is still alive whilst at the same time wondering if he abandoned her all those years ago. And she’s haunted by things revealed during her interrogation, the result of covert surveillence. Were they true or concocted in the hope she would betray her comrades?

Her other objective is to confront those responsible for the cruel treatment she received in prison and to find out why they did what they did. Her relentless determination to hunt them down gives a glimpse of that determined young white woman who became an anti-apartheid activist despite the dangers, who flouted segregation laws to be with the man she loved – ‘They couldn’t go to movies, restaurants, bars, or clubs together. Every venue was delineated by race’ – and was shunned by her family as a result.

Will she find genuine contrition for her treatment or a refusal to accept responsibility because it was just a job, they were only following orders? Will some remain unrepentent, their positions of authority having given free rein to their innate cruelty?

Meadowlands Dawn sheds light on a violent period in the history of South Africa but it’s also a moving story about laying to rest the ghosts of the past. The fact it is based on the author’s own experiences makes it all the more powerful. I hope there will be more from this author because Meadowlands Dawn is an impressive debut.

My thanks to Sean at époque press for my digital review copy. You can listen to Jo reading an excerpt from the novel here.

In three words: Powerful, authentic, moving


About the Author

Jo Beall, author of Meadowlands Dawn

Jo studied English Literature and History before completing a PhD in Geography at the London School of Economics. She taught international development at the LSE, was Deputy Vice Chancellor at the University of Cape Town and was Global Director of Education and Cultural Engagement at the British Council.

Meadowlands Dawn is Jo’s debut novel, inspired by her own experience as an activist and political prisoner under apartheid in South Africa. (Photo/bio: Publisher author page)