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The Lanarchs (2011)

by Owen Marshall

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393635,500 (4.2)9
"The story of the growing relationship between Conny [William Larnach's third wife] and William's younger son, Dougie, lies at the heart of Owen Marshall's ... novel"--Back cover.
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I found the lack of direct speech difficult at first, but by the end I had nothing but admiration for the way Marshall had turned my allegiance from Connie to Dougie and then William. I think the psychology of an affair was what I found most fascinating - motivations, self-delusion and justifications all artfully controlled and manipulated by the author. ( )
1 vote effrenata | Jul 14, 2012 |
I was delighted when I first read of this book. I had the pleasure of visiting Larnach Castle in Dunedin a few years ago and was intrigued by the family history and thought surely there is a novel to be written. I was doubly pleased that an author of such repute had taken on the task and I was not disappointed.
William Larnach was a politician and self-made man who built what is known as Larnach's Castle on the Otago Peninsula in New Zealand. Unfortunately during this project his wife Eliza died. He married her sister Mary, who lived with them, largely to provide a mother figure for his youngest daughter, Gladys - a marriage of convenience.
Mary also died 5 years later and William is drawn to the much younger, attractive and well educated forthright Constance de Bathe Brandon, daughter of a parlimentary colleague, who became his third wife.
The marriage began with promise, William finding Constance an asset to his social standing in Wellington and she too was content. However when William's beloved daughter Kate dies of typhoid, William becomes depressed and morose. William's other adult daughters in Dunedin have never accepted their father's choice of bride and make life unpleasant for her in Larnach. Her only allies being young Gladys and his younger son Dougie, only seven years younger than Conny.
William's suffers financial set back and a couple of accidents, which make him more depressed. Meanwhile Conny and Dougie develop a close frienship which gradually becomes a love affair.
The story is narrated by Conny and Dougie in alternate chapters and the author handles the differnt voices well. A backdrop of the social and political climate of the late nineteenth century weaves smoothly through the story.
I found this a very satisfying novel to read. It is also beautifully bound. ( )
1 vote HelenBaker | Mar 17, 2012 |
Story of affair between William Larnachs wife and his son and his ensuing suicide. Told alternatively from the perspective of wife and son. Beautifully written ( )
1 vote mary.mchale | Mar 17, 2012 |
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"The story of the growing relationship between Conny [William Larnach's third wife] and William's younger son, Dougie, lies at the heart of Owen Marshall's ... novel"--Back cover.

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