12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Delicious, delightful, de-wonderful reading!, August 6, 2004
This is the third Buchan novel I've read so it's time to confess I'm a fan, and I'm not just waving air. This is a particular kind of wit that was inspired earlier by Fay Weldon and Buchan has done more with it. Buchan's novels are irresistable and mighty tasty reads. There's wit aplenty and intelligence as well as a worldview of interest. This one, "The Good Wife" has to do with a loyal MP's wife who, 20 years down the marriage pike, has to reassess her existence, her life, her marriage. It's quite good indeed.
The other two Buchan books I enjoyed are: Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman and Perfect Love, this latter could have been somewhat shorter (editors note same). Buchan writes entirely fine novels but I dislike her titles which probably help her to sell well so I should shut up. I think the titles diminish the literary quality of the novels which is high.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
More Than It Seems, February 14, 2004
For some strange reason, Elizabeth Buchan's American publisher has chosen to ignore the fact that she is an award-winning, thoughtful author, and relegate her to the masses of romance novels. Hence the ridiculous title--after her last book, renamed "Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman," do I detect a pattern here? Are American readers too lowbrow to choose a book unless it has a soap-opera title?
No matter. The book is lovely anyway, and more than it seems. It is the careful and often heart-tugging story of a marriage that is not exactly ordinary: Will is a British MP, and his wife Fanny, once a free spirit who ran a wine company with her father, is now the dutiful, adoring wife. Only it doesn't quite work out that way.
Over a series of years and overlapping time periods, we see how the marriage evolves from a crazy-in-love-at-first-sight honeymoon into a real relationship, with all the attendant baggage that comes with it. Will, to my mind, is the most self-centered human being one could imagine, I suppose like all politicians, and it is in his character that Buchan lets us down--I simply could not see why a strong, vibrant woman like Fanny would put up with him. This is explained to us in various months and years of Fanny's adaption to her political life, but it never quite makes sense.
Will's alcholic sister Meg moves in with the young couple almost immediately, and is horribly intrusive throughout the book, and yet the two woman have some strange and yet unmistakable bond. Meg's son Sacha appears at age 16, choosing to live with his mother, and so joins the household that already contains Will and Fanny's only daughter Chloe.
Fanny's father, a wonderful, robust, full-of-life transplanted Italian who loves his vineyard and his daughter with equal gusto, represents the other side of Fanny's character--and so we learn a great deal about her--if not her choices.
I notice that in this version of the book, the publisher took care to change Brit phrases like "jumper" into "sweater," but left "tights" alone. So for those readers who do not know, tights are pantyhose in Britain--it's impossible to imagine Fanny on one of her deadly boring political tea-drinking outings wearing American tights!
Another good book from Buchan--not her best, but well worth reading. Just put a brown paper bag over the title.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Strikes Back? Strikes Out!, February 11, 2006
This review is from: The Good Wife Strikes Back (Paperback)
I picked this book up and started reading the first few pages and was hooked. It was readable and flowed smoothly, although the way Fanny knuckled under to everyone else's $hit irritated me. She plays like 2nd (or 3rd) fiddle in everybody's life and even though she sometimes complains, she never *does* anything about it. Then, just about the time she gets in a situation where she could empower herself and step out on her own, POOF! Several events occur that just sweep her problems right away. What was that? How did she strike back when she never changed as a person? Why have her get out of her predicament not under her own steam but be "rescued" by circumstances that change her life *for* her? It's almost like the author was given a contract that said, "You can't go over X amount of words," and she was thinking, "Oops, better end the book fast before I run over my quota!"
In sum, if ya wanna see a wife strike back, watch *The Little Foxes,* starring Bette Davis as a woman who knows what the word revenge means and takes it to new heights. Now there's a role model!
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