Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

A Cupboard Full of Coats

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: UK Oneworld Book 2012Description: 260pISBN:
  • 9781851688388
DDC classification:
  • F/EDW
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
General Books General Books Colombo F/EDW Available

Order online
Long Listed for The Man Booker Prize 2011 CA00013214
General Books General Books Kandy General Stacks Fiction F/EDW Available

Order online
KB104400
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

'Deeply moving, wonderfully written... A study of grief and remorse.' The Times

'He just knocked, that was all, knocked at the front door and waited...'

Fourteen years ago, Jinx's mother was brutally murdered in their East London home. Since then, her life - and relationships - have been poisoned with guilt.The sudden arrival of Lemon, an old friend of her mother's, changes everything. He wants to revisit the events leading to that terrible night, forcing Jinx to finally confront her past. Fuelled by Lemon's sumptuous cooking and intoxicating story-telling, together they strip away the layers of the past to lay bare a family drama full of jealousy and tragic betrayal. But Lemon has secrets of his own to share. And as Jinx's life threatens to fall apart for a second time, she finally begins to believe that redemption might be within her grasp. Blending true East London spirit with a heady Caribbean spice, A Cupboard Full of Coats is a novel of breathtaking elegance that has become a beloved modern classic.

Shortlisted for the Commonwealth Prize * Shortlisted for the Writers' Guild Awards * Shortlisted for the Waverton Good Read Award * Nominated for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award

£8.99

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Edwards elegantly braids together the lives of three people whose entangled love for the same woman turns sour in this gut-wrenching and gorgeously lyrical debut novel. Fourteen years after Jinx Jackson's mother was killed, "Lemon," a man mysteriously involved in the events of the murder, shows up at her doorstep with crippling news: the murderer is out of prison. Jinx's first instinct is to run. Full well knowing it's "too late for regret," Lemon wants to "put the record straight." And over a period of three days, Edwards sweeps the reader along a stream of memories revolving around Jinx's mother, who chose an abusive relationship over loneliness. "To know her was to love her," and love her these characters did (and do), each in their own way, but some of that love contributed to her murder "in hot blood." Edwards has drawn complicated characters whose voices are as distinct as the choices they have made. Jinx propels the narrative forward with her raw honesty as she unpacks the "private disgrace" that is her life. Engrossing and human to the core, Edwards's novel wrings the heart in the most tender of ways. (Jun.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Kirkus Book Review

First novel explores the trans-generational fallout from an abusive relationship.Edwards vividly re-creates the lifestyles, cuisine and dialect of Caribbean immigrants living in London's East End.Her narrator is Jinx, whose present life has been tainted by her mother's violent death 14 years earlier, for which she blames herself.When an old family friend, Lemon, appears out of nowhere, Jinx is forced to relive the events leading up to the tragedy.Her mother's lover, Berris, the man who stabbed her, grew up with Lemon as a street urchin on the tiny West Indies island of Montserrat. The two men are lifelong friends, but also rivals. Berris spoiled Lemon's marriage by impugning his wife's chastity and the paternity of his son.Meanwhile, Jinx reflects on how her own marriage suffered from her traumatic adolescence.Having relinquished custody of her son to her ex-husband, she has no maternal feelings toward the child. Her alienation is such that she only feels comfortable around the dead people she makes up in her job as a freelance embalmer. Now, long estranged from his son, his wife dead of cancer, Lemon has come to confess something to Jinx.As Jinx and Lemon tiptoe around each other, various facts emerge.Jinx was 16 when Berris appeared.Her formerly tranquil life with her mother, a widow, is shattered by her mother's total absorption in Berris. When he moves in, a pattern begins: He hits Jinx's mother (we don't learn her name until the end) then, to atone, buys her progressively more luxurious coats, until she has a closetful.Jinx loses her virginity to the much older Lemon, but is stung by his apparent crush on her mother.Her resentment explodes into rage after Berris beats her, and her mother ignores her screams.As both Lemon and Jinx cautiouslysummon long suppressed memories of the night of the murder, the novel spirals to a satisfying if notentirely surprising climax.An impressive debut, particularly notable for its pellucid prose.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.