Claire Fuller: The swimming lessons, Fig Tree (Penguin Random House UK), 9780241252178, Trade Paperback

The book opens with this sentence: “Gil Coleman
looked down from the first floor window of the bookshop and saw his dead wife
standing on the pavement.”
And from there I was hooked, taking in the
story the Coleman family, Gil, the professor and famous writer, Ingrid, former
student of Gil’s and mother to Flora and Nan who gave up a promising career after
falling in love with her professor and becoming pregnant. A phone call from her sister Nan calls Flora back to their family house by the sea as their father had an accident. It becomes clear that their aging father
collapsed injuring himself after having run after what he thought was his dead
wife Ingrid.
Having two story lines running parallel is not
a novel concept but Claire Fuller does it brilliantly. From the present situation it becomes clear that Ingrid disappeared one day never to be
found, presumed drowned as she was very fond of swimming in the sea in all
kinds of weathers and seasons. Gil never
recovered from this tragedy and her death pretty much destroyed the family. What makes this book so unusual is the second
story line, Ingrid’s letters to her husband over the years of her marriage, never
to be mailed but hidden in books of her husband’s extensive library.
Through
these letters the story of their marriage and love eventually unfolds, adding one piece of the puzzle after another, shedding light on the reason why Ingrid might have disappeared.
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