Fotografía de autor

Victoria Gosling

Autor de Before the Ruins

2 Obras 127 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Obras de Victoria Gosling

Before the Ruins (2020) 122 copias
Bliss and Blunder (2023) 5 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female

Miembros

Reseñas

Memory is a house, a castle with many rooms. Some of the rooms are deeper inside, honeycombed away. Each has a thousand keys – an image, a smell, a sound. Behind each door are a thousand other doors.

Victoria Gosling’s debut novel Before the Ruins is based on a common literary trope – that of a narrator who revisits formative events experienced by a younger, less experienced self. In this case, the story is told by thirty-eight-year-old Andrea, known to her old friends as Andy, now working in London as a compliance officer for an investment fund. What triggers her exercise in retrospection is the sudden disappearance of Peter, a close childhood companion and the son of the vicar of the village where Andy grew up. This mystery evokes memories of the golden summer of 1996. In search of adventure after their final exams, Peter, her boyfriend Marcus and their friend Em had broken into a local abandoned manor and befriended David, a young man their age who was living there in hiding after an ill-advised card theft. Inspired by the story of the theft of a diamond necklace fifty years earlier and the subsequent sudden death of a potential suspect, the five play treasure hunts with a replica necklace, secretly hoping to find the real thing.

A crumbling stately home, hidden jewels, nostalgic accounts of summer holidays… the novel’s initial chapters feel like a grown-up version of the Famous Five – not unlike Secret Passages in a Hillside Town by Pasi Ilmari Jääskeläinen, albeit without the latter’s crazy weirdness.

However, this description doesn’t really do justice to what turns out to be a narratively complex work. The novels juggles three timelines – the present, 1996 (with an ‘epilogue’ which happens three years later) and, to a lesser extent, 1936. I read somewhere that the book’s working title was The Mysteries. Before the Ruins sounds more poetic, with its punning play on the meaning of “before”, simultaneously suggesting an account of what led to the narrator’s “apocalypse” (i.e. before as “prior”) and a spectator surveying the results of a tragic collapse (i.e. before as “in front of”).

Yet, “The Mysteries” goes straight to the heart of the novel. Because this is indeed a book based on mysteries – not just the location of the missing jewels (harkening to the plots of Enid Blyton and classic “cozy” detective novels) but also, and more importantly, the secrets which the characters, despite being close friends, are constantly hiding; the lies they tell each other and, sometimes, themselves; the domestic tragedies and abuse lived in silence between four walls. In a meta-twist, the novel becomes at once a mystery novel and a novel about mysteries. Significantly, towards the end, after watching an episode of a detective novel on TV, Andrea ruminates about

How different the programme was from life. How life was full of mysteries that would not be solved, not ever, while we lived. But that each of us would play the detective nonetheless, and the life and death we would investigate, whether we knew it or not, was our own, and the thing was not to become deadened to them, to the mysteries.

Admittedly, as the “mysteries” pile up, we as readers are increasingly expected to suspend our disbelief. Just like during an airing of The Midsomer Murders one starts to wonder whether the levels of intrigue in Wiltshire villages might not be statistically skewed… Frankly, I did not mind this at all. I could not care less about the improbability of certain plot twists and just read on, immersed and, more often than not, moved. What I liked best about Before the Ruins is how the novel’s several storylines are presented within the structure of a poetic coming-of-age narrative, one whose aching nostalgia reminded me of Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited (referenced in the title of one of the final chapters). Perhaps it helped that, like the narrator, I also came of age in the nineties – and whilst I wasn’t dropping Es or carousing in abandoned manors in the English countryside, I still lovingly remember that decade.

Or perhaps the novel touched deeper, speaking to the little boy curled up on a sofa reading The Famous Five...
… (más)
 
Denunciada
JosephCamilleri | 3 reseñas más. | Feb 21, 2023 |
Andrea and the gang all grew up together, but she and Peter were always best of friends. Until they all parted ways for college. Andy was the only one left behind. She was doing okay, until Peter's mother called in a panic; she hadn't seen or heard from Peter in over a month. She then recruits Andy to locate him. This takes Andy on a journey of discovery she didn't see coming.

This novel took my breath away. It's a story about secrets, lies, and protecting those you love. A fabulous mystery with an unexpected ending.… (más)
 
Denunciada
sunshine9573 | 3 reseñas más. | Dec 19, 2022 |
Story was rather muddled with the unclear flashbacks, making it hard to follow what could have been a great modern gothic, plus there were no sympathetic characters, which can kill a mystery.
 
Denunciada
bookwyrmm | 3 reseñas más. | Jun 5, 2022 |
I listened to this book, and sadly, the playback wouldn’t allow me to hear chapters 20 and 22. However, I had heard enough. Andy and her friends play a silly game one year, one ends up dead, and she spends years trying to recreate the events, wondering what could have been different. She questions her relationships with Marcus, David, and Peter. Peter’s disappearance triggered all of memories.
This book is getting a lot of praise, but I was not a huge fan.
 
Denunciada
rmarcin | 3 reseñas más. | Feb 7, 2021 |

Estadísticas

Obras
2
Miembros
127
Popularidad
#158,248
Valoración
3.2
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
12

Tablas y Gráficos