Isa & May

Margaret Forster

Isa & May

Isamay, a would-be academic, is trying to write a coherent thesis about grandmothers in history - from Sarah Bernhardt and George Sand to the matriarchal Queen Victoria and other influential grannies - while constantly ambushed by the secrets her own family has been keeping. An only child, she is named after her grandmothers, Isa and May, who were there at her birth and who have formed and influenced her in very different ways. Jealous of each other, they both want to be first in their granddaughter's affections. Isa has an edge, in that young Isamay looks like her, but Isa's reserved and elegant exterior hides startling surprises that could undermine her granddaughter's certainties. May, on the other hand, is plump, indomitable and opinionated, and it's from her that Isamay inherits her stubborn determination. Isamay, almost thirty, has never wanted children, but suddenly considers changing her mind. Her live-in lover, Ian (always mysterious about his own family history) is sure that he does not want a child. Set in the present but with hooks into the past, this is a story about grandmothers and their potentially powerful role in family life, about nature versus nurture, bloodlines and bridges across generations. 3.9 out of 5 based on 5 reviews
Isa & May

Omniscore:

Classification Fiction
Genre General Fiction
Format Hardback
Pages 320
RRP £17.99
Date of Publication February 2010
ISBN 978-0701184667
Publisher Chatto & Windus
 

Isamay, a would-be academic, is trying to write a coherent thesis about grandmothers in history - from Sarah Bernhardt and George Sand to the matriarchal Queen Victoria and other influential grannies - while constantly ambushed by the secrets her own family has been keeping. An only child, she is named after her grandmothers, Isa and May, who were there at her birth and who have formed and influenced her in very different ways. Jealous of each other, they both want to be first in their granddaughter's affections. Isa has an edge, in that young Isamay looks like her, but Isa's reserved and elegant exterior hides startling surprises that could undermine her granddaughter's certainties. May, on the other hand, is plump, indomitable and opinionated, and it's from her that Isamay inherits her stubborn determination. Isamay, almost thirty, has never wanted children, but suddenly considers changing her mind. Her live-in lover, Ian (always mysterious about his own family history) is sure that he does not want a child. Set in the present but with hooks into the past, this is a story about grandmothers and their potentially powerful role in family life, about nature versus nurture, bloodlines and bridges across generations.

Reviews

The Literary Review

Kate Saunders

"The issues of motherhood and mothering are of central importance to most women, and they are rarely treated with such unsentimental honesty; Forster’s women are the true descendants of Arnold Bennett’s salty, practical, bloody-minded heroines… [A] rich, fascinating novel."

01/02/2010

Read Full Review


The Daily Mail

Helen Brown

"It's a deliciously observed, dilemma-and-drama-packed read"

10/02/2010

Read Full Review


The Times

Matthew Dennison

"This is a sensitive and intelligent novel with passages of beautifully modulated pathos while being, in parts, hugely funny."

06/02/2010

Read Full Review


The Sunday Times

Penny Perrick

"Isa & May is a compelling story, sometimes funny, sometimes painfully sad. Forster is pretty much unequalled as a chronicler of domestic upheaval and this lively novel confirms her status."

07/02/2010

Read Full Review


The Financial Times

Sue Gaisford

"For the first half of the novel we share Isamay’s struggles to sort out her thesis and keep each of the battling grannies happy. It becomes, unfortunately, pretty tedious… However, around the middle, Forster the storyteller comes into her own… an ungainly yet surprisingly enjoyable and memorable book."

15/02/2010

Read Full Review


©2011 Omnivore Limited