She handles the time shifts deftly as Hagar slips between reminiscence and present awareness- sometimes even within the same paragraph. Laurence has wonderful control of this story. Enraged and frightened, Hagar runs away to an old family property in the country where she spends a few cold, thirsty dank nights until found and hospitalized with a diagnosis of cancer and a short time to live. Doris herself is nearly seventy, and Marvin and Doris plan to place her in a nursing home. And yet it is the long-ignored Marvin that she shares her home with, along with his dowdy wife Doris, on whom the care burden falls as Hagar becomes more frail, dependent and confused. Her eldest son Marvin was invisible to her throughout his life her favourite son John died in a stupid driving prank. The marriage foundered: she was ashamed of her husband’s uncouthness and refused to ever reveal the pleasure that sex with him brought her. The only daughter of a rich merhant, she despised her widowed father’s pride in her achievements and emotional dependence on her, and deliberately married the sort of man she knew he disapproved of. Hagar, the focal character of this book is raging all the way, just as she has throughout her long life. I’m not a great epigraph reader, but the epigraph of this book seemed particularly apposite- Do not go gentle into that good night/ Rage, rage against the dying of the light (Dylan Thomas).
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