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Sunshine on a rainy day
Bryony Fraser
Synopsis
Zoe and Jack have only been married for a year, but announce their divorce at the party amongst family. Zoe receives the counselling of her three sisters, and Jack's best friend attempts to help him through it.
This book has a different slant on relationships to others in this genre, and it drew me in for that reason. Fraser opts to show both Zoe and Jack's perspective on their relationship, which was a little confusing at the start, but was easier to follow when I got used to their differing voices. She also gives us snapshots of different time periods in Zoe and Jack's relationship, such as seven years before the marriage, in a non linear manner not unlike Quentin Tarantino's earlier films. Although there's very little of the violence and explicit language he employs.
It also reminded me a little of the plot of a Vince Vaughan and Jennifer Aniston movie, as that movie's plot centred on a couple breaking up, but unwilling to move out of their shared home. Zoe and Jack both refuse to be the one to search for a new place to live, and are reduced to making a weekly rota for their bed. The supporting characters such as Benni, Zoe's boss and Chuck, her sister's current boss to name but two, all have a different slant on what they want from a romantic partner.
The history between Zoe and Chuck is evident throughout the novel, but Fraser allows the truth of the past unhealthy relationship to unfold slowly in the background. Fraser writes Zoe as being a woman influenced but not overwhelmed by her former relationship, which made her a endearing and likable character.
It's a lighthearted and less predictable addition to the 'chick lit' genre, and definitely worth packing for holiday reading.
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