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Victoria Park: Gemma Reeves von Gemma Reeves
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Victoria Park: Gemma Reeves (2021. Auflage)

von Gemma Reeves (Autor)

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1731,247,307 (3.21)1
Mona and Wolfie have lived on Victoria Park for over 50 years. As their 65th wedding anniversary approaches, they must decide how to navigate Mona's declining health. Bookended by the touching exploration of their love, Victoria Park follows 12 people living in their shared east-London neighbourhood over the course of a single year. As the months unfold, ordinary days give way to extraordinary moments. A young man finds more than he bargains for when he breaks into a house. A couple navigate IVF with varying degrees of enthusiasm. A mother struggles with the morality of reading her daughter's diary. Meanwhile, the lingering memory of an acid attack in the park sends ripples of unease through the community. Told from multiple perspectives against a backdrop of the changing seasons, these carefully interwoven tales create a rich tapestry of a novel and a meditation on resilience, love and loss.… (mehr)
Mitglied:dsc73277
Titel:Victoria Park: Gemma Reeves
Autoren:Gemma Reeves (Autor)
Info:Allen & Unwin (2021), Edition: Main, 304 pages
Sammlungen:Gelesen, aber nicht im Besitz
Bewertung:**
Tags:library book, ebook, fiction, London, community, family, read in 2021

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Victoria Park von Gemma Reeves

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An interesting novel with a twisty plot that keeps the reader in suspense. I bought the novel because I grew up in the area and it brought up some old memories. ( )
  Arten60 | Dec 17, 2023 |
Whilst there is nothing original about telling the interweaving stories of neighbours living in a tight-knit community, Gemma Reeve’s moving debut novel stands out as an excellent illustration of how effective this method of storytelling can be. Her evocative use of language was evident within her earliest sentences, meaning that by the end of the first chapter I felt I’d not only got to know (and love) Wolfie and Mona in the present day, but had learnt much about their fifty-year marriage, about the kosher deli Wolfie had, until his retirement a year earlier, owned and run for sixty-six years, the shed at the bottom of his garden where he continued to smoke salmon and his philosophy on cooking – Cooking helped him to shrink the borders between giving people what they needed and understanding what he needed himself.
I’d also been introduced to other members of his community and had made my first trip into Victoria Park, where Wolfie now walked every day – a routine Mona had prescribed for him since retirement. ‘There’s nothing a brisk walk can’t fix’ she would say … She was right, as she so often was. The author’s ability to so immediately conjure-up such vivid, evocative images, to make her characters leap from the page, ensured that each of the following eleven chapters added complex layers of depth to the developing story.
Although each of the chapters is written from the perspective of a different character who lives close to the park, one of the central strengths of the story lies in how their stories intersect, allowing the reader to gradually see each of the individual characters and their experiences in a different light. I was really impressed by the author’s skill in giving her disparate characters such distinctive voices as she revealed their daily lives and the struggles they were facing. With such relatively short chapters and many changes of perspective, the story could so easily have felt disjointed but there was never a moment when I felt unable to follow its flow, or to remain immersed in the lives of all the residents. I’m sure that this was due to the fact that the interconnectedness of the characters, the gradual revelations of the impact individuals’ behaviour had on the lives of others in the community, were all explored with sensitivity and empathy.
The author used her characters to explore some important themes: the anguish of dementia, the search for identity, the stresses of IVF treatment, family breakdown, deprivation, the effects of gentrification on a tight-knit community, illegal immigration, betrayal, love and loss, to name just a few. There were times when I found it almost unbearably painful to read about the struggles and disappointments many of the characters were facing, as well as the various losses they were having to deal with. However, I never felt a sense of despair because throughout the story there are many examples of the resilience of human beings, of moments of joy, of optimism and of quiet humour.
I know Victoria Park and think the author made it come alive so effectively that I felt I was walking through it with the characters, taking pleasure in watching it change from season to season and appreciating its importance as a resource for the community. She engaged my sense of taste and smell with her wonderful descriptions of food (how I’d love to try Wolfie’s smoked salmon – perhaps with a little horseradish and some of his potato salad!) Her descriptions of the local market, the noises and smells of the streets, the changing nature of the houses as new people move in and the process of gentrification begins, the shops which reflected the multi-cultural make-up of the community, were all equally evocative.
I loved this perceptive, poignant and eloquently written debut novel and know that the author’s characters will remain vivid in my memory. Encapsulated within the narrative are so many reflections on how dramatically life can change within a single year, making this story feel particularly pertinent as we approach the end of 2020, a year which has brought not only so much change and loss, but one which has also seen a heightening of support within our communities.
With thanks to Readers First and the publisher for providing a copy in exchange for an honest review. ( )
  linda.a. | Dec 14, 2020 |
This is the story of some really interesting, although fictional, characters who live in the Victoria Park area of East London. Starting in the autumn , the book covers a whole year in the lives of these people, with each part of the book covering a new month and a different set of characters. These people are all linked by the fact that they have all been neighbours for some time and many of them know each other by name , while others only recognise each other by sight. Before the story begins, we find that the Victoria Park residents have been unsettled by there having been a brutal attack on one of the neighbours in the form of an acid attack. The attacker has never been found , and this makes the residents of this area very nervous. The people in Victoria Park come from various different ethnic backgrounds, many of them being immigrants, although some have lived in London for many decades. ( )
  nuttybooklady | Dec 13, 2020 |
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Mona and Wolfie have lived on Victoria Park for over 50 years. As their 65th wedding anniversary approaches, they must decide how to navigate Mona's declining health. Bookended by the touching exploration of their love, Victoria Park follows 12 people living in their shared east-London neighbourhood over the course of a single year. As the months unfold, ordinary days give way to extraordinary moments. A young man finds more than he bargains for when he breaks into a house. A couple navigate IVF with varying degrees of enthusiasm. A mother struggles with the morality of reading her daughter's diary. Meanwhile, the lingering memory of an acid attack in the park sends ripples of unease through the community. Told from multiple perspectives against a backdrop of the changing seasons, these carefully interwoven tales create a rich tapestry of a novel and a meditation on resilience, love and loss.

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