TELL
ME SOMETHING
BY
ADELE PARKS
THE
BLURB:-
When Elizabeth and her
Italian husband Roberto decide to leave London for romantic Italy and
his family business, Elizabeth hopes the change in lifestyle might
help boost her chances of conceiving their longed-for child. But the
idyll shatters as her wily mother-in-law seems bent on destroying her
marriage, and Roberto's beautiful, significant ex is a constant
unwanted presence. Unwanted by Elizabeth, at least.
Is Elizabeth's
ferocious hunger for a baby enough to hold a marriage together or is
it ripping it apart? And what about the gorgeous American stranger
who's suddenly walked into her life?
THE
REALITY:-
I've read a couple of
novels by Adele Parks, many moons ago. Game Over was brilliant and
Playing Away was shite. I'm aware that I'm dipping into the dreaded
genre of “chick lit” and maybe have to concede that well-executed
chick lit is perhaps okay.
The novel is called
Tell Me Something and the byline on the cover is One Word Was All
That Mattered- neither of which made any sense. Who is needing to be
told what? I'm assuming that Elizabeth, the lead character is the
one who needs telling something, but what is the one word? Is it a
yes to the question of a) whether Roberto is having an affair with
Ana-Maria (his gorgeous ex-girlfriend) or not or b) the nod to go
forward and look into IVF treatment? I fear that the person putting
the cover together has, sadly, not read the novel (something that
royally annoys me- a little continuity would be nice). Either
that or I'm missing something entirely.
Whilst other critics
have lambasted Elizabeth for her lack of direction in sorting out a
career for herself and instead just drifting as a waitress- and for not
having actually gone back to visit Italy since her first wonderful
visit aged fourteen, and also not even bothering to learn the
language- I find her all too believable. She's typical of many young
women who just drift, and who put finding a husband and having
children above all else. I liked her. I also loved the way her
attempts to conceive a baby were discussed in often glorious
technicolour detail. I sometimes wanted to kick her for being overly
obsessed with the whole fertility ritual.
The Italian side of the
story paints a vivid picture of a place unlike Elizabeth's
expectations and shows Roberto up to be a bit of a turd when it comes
to his cow of a mother, Raffaella. He can see no wrong with this
evil dragon and comes across as a right mummy's boy. It's
interesting watching that relationship develop, as the novel starts
with him having had a family row (we never find out over what) and
leaving for London, then getting married and, following redundancy,
making up with Raffaella with all animosities forgotten. Hmm. I've
always thought that relationships between mothers and sons can be
extremely unhealthy (I have personal experience of witnessing
this, both in my own home with my mother and brother and there have
also been incidents with boyfriends and their mums). This was a
part of the book that holds up well. I came to hate Raffaella, and
it was indicative of how much Elizabeth wanted her marriage to work (or, more so, wanted someone to make babies with) that she put up with Raffaella treating her like dirt- until she
found her balls and stood up to this evil witch.
The end chapters became
rather convoluted and messily written and between all this you
wanted to shake Elizabeth for her silliness. But I'm glad she got her
happy Italian ending with her American hunk, Chuck. I've always
thought it quite obvious that some couples are more compatible than
others when it comes to baby-making and I'm glad the story ended with
her having his baby!
A likeable read.