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The Queen of the Tambourine by Jane Gardam
The Queen of the Tambourine by Jane Gardam








She is a modern-day Florence Nightingale, always up at the Hospice or the Wives' club she is too enthusiastic she talks too much. I've heard her novel Old Filth is brilliant though so that's my next Gardam read.Eliza Peabody is one of those dangerously blameless women who believe they have God in their pocket.

The Queen of the Tambourine by Jane Gardam

I thought the novel started out well but became a bit muddled and flawed half way through. Though I enjoyed her writing and I intend to read her other books, this probably shouldn't have been my first experience with Jane Gardam. The book is filled with riddles but there are solutions in the end. Does this Joan really exist? Why did Eliza's husband leave her? Why do people in her neighborhood avoid her or treat her very delicately? Is she mad?

The Queen of the Tambourine by Jane Gardam

Did Gardam lose the plot for a while there? We do start to see that nothing is quite what it seems. I enjoyed the letters but they started to increase in length till they didn't really seem like letters anymore but became more of a narrative. Just a nosy and annoying neighbor who everyone secretly dislikes. Eliza, funnily enough reminded me so much of Mrs.Bucket from that old British series, Keeping up Appearances. Gardam's writing has shades of Barbara Pym but she's definitely darker and more wicked. Of course Eliza never gets any replies to her letters but there are a few oddball characters who visit her bearing exotic gifts from Joan.

The Queen of the Tambourine by Jane Gardam

Eliza imagines herself to be a close friend of Joan though actually they never even spoke to one another when they were neighbors. Winner of the Whitbread award for 1991, the book consists of letters written by Eliza Peabody, a housewife in her fifties to her neighbor Joan who has recently abandoned her family to go on a worldwide adventure. Queen of the Tambourine is the first novel I've read by Jane Gardam and though I'm impressed by her style and her writing, I wouldn't exactly call this an enjoyable read.










The Queen of the Tambourine by Jane Gardam