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Swimming Home: A Novel
Swimming Home: A Novel
Swimming Home: A Novel
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Swimming Home: A Novel

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize

"Readers will have to resist the temptation to hurry up in order to find out what happens . . . Our reward is the enjoyable, if unsettling, experience of being pitched into the deep waters of Levy's wry, accomplished novel." - Francine Prose, The New York Times Book Review

As he arrives with his family at the villa in the hills above Nice, France, Joe sees a body in the swimming pool. But the girl is very much alive. She is Kitty Finch: a self-proclaimed botanist with green-painted fingernails, walking naked out of the water and into the heart of their holiday. Why is she there? What does she want from them all? And why does Joe's enigmatic wife allow her to remain?

A subversively brilliant study of love, Swimming Home reveals how the most devastating secrets are the ones we keep from ourselves.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 14, 2012
ISBN9781620401705
Swimming Home: A Novel
Author

Deborah Levy

Deborah Levy (Johannesburgo, 1959) es una novelis­ta, poeta y dramaturga británica, que ha sido llevada a escena por la Royal Shakespeare Company. Entre sus libros destacan Beautiful Mutants, Swallowing Geography, The Unloved y Swimming Home and Other Stories, que fue finalista de, entre otros pre­mios, el Man Booker en 2012. Con Leche caliente quedó finalista de los premios Man Booker y Goldsmiths en 2016. Foto © Sheila Burnett

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Rating: 3.400630927444795 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Deborah Levy weaves a multi-layered tale where nothing is quite as it seems. Kitty is a disturbed young woman who gate crashes a villa where two British families are on holiday. On the surface she appears passive yet she is the catalyst that makes everything unravel. Levy evokes the heat and sultry atmosphere of the South of France in spades. A gem.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I didn't really like this book. Found it rather depressing and a bit pretentious. Although I agree with most reviewer's content (printed on the cover pages) I don't agree with their kudos. Studies of dark, troubled individuals are not my thing, nor is a cast of thoroughly unlikable characters. By the way hasn't anyone noticed that in the contemporary world Poets are neither rich nor famous -- at least the living ones.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book is rather wonderful - cryptic, elusive, allusive and dreamlike, and very difficult to encapsulate or describe in a meaningful review. My only previous exposure to Levy was reading her most recent book Hot Milk, and this book occupies similar territory, at least superficially. Both are full of symbolism and striking imagery, and share similar southern European settings, but ultimately depend more on what is not said than what is. Levy toys with her characters and appears to understand them better than they do themselves. I won't even attempt to describe the plot, which seems almost irrelevant.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    this book is written so well, it's almost like poetry. two poets try to swim their way home by fighting their inner demons. loved it!!!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What a fantastic work of prose! I have been in a bit of a reading slump lately, and this finely crafted story has given me the proverbial 'kick in the pants' to realize reading can still be a pleasure not a chore.
    A short novel but one that packs a powerful punch, this story of a family's vacation in the south of France and their encounter with a less than stable young woman they find swimming nude in their rented villa's pool, is worthy of it's place on the shortlist of the Man Booker Prize.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Up to page 50, this was the dullest book I'd read recently. Page 50 to about page 115 picked up a little, but still no visible reason for fuss. Pages 115-155 (the end, finally) were variously thriller, suspense, and tripped-out nonsense. And this made the Man Booker Prize shortlist? My respect for that honour just went down a few notches.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Swimming home by Deborah LevyThis story is about a family that travels to enjoy their vacation at a villa. Joe and his wife Isobelle and daughter Nina. They arrive to find a nude woman, Kitty Finch coming out of their pool and after talking to her they find there are no hotel rooms and Laura invites her to stay with them.Joe is a poet and he finds the hot women are chasing him to read their own poetry-to help get them discovered.Other tourists get the attention of the family. Surprised kind of at the ending, thought it'd be another.I received this book from National Library Service for my BARD (Braille Audio Reading Device).
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    The characters were flat, undifferentiated. They were faceless to me, doing nothing, being nothing, but somehow permeating the book with their unspoken whining. Intensely irritating. They all melted together as an amorphous mass of indecipherable...nothingness. I am so done with this book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A philandering famous poet, his war correspondent wife and their daughter are spending the summer with friends at a villa in the South of France when out of the blue a naked young woman steps out of their swimming pool. The poet's wife invites Kitty (as she's called) to stay in the spare room of the villa as she says there has been a mix up in bookings, knowingly lighting the touchpaper of their marital problems.Kitty has a deadly combination of mental illness and obsession with the poet's writing, and the summer will never be the same again after her arrival.This novel was a quick read, and although it was inevitably leading up to a big end event I felt like I didn't totally engage with the writing. The characters were all fairly unlikeable, and though I never felt like aborting the read, I felt immediately ambivalent about it when I'd finished.3 stars - forgettable.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A short sharp shock of a story - complicated characters having complicated and slightly obscure interactions. There's something dreamlike about the way things unfold, and the book has a pervasive atmosphere of uneasiness. I felt like I missed some of the symbolism and references, and there were a few too many characters to juggle in such a short novel, but the ending is powerful and memorable.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Beautifully written. Short. Hard to put down, even when you want to. A book that you will think about for a very long time.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I enjoyed the language in the book. It was a short book but Levy does a good job establishing the characters. Obviously, it was hard to get into the head of each character in the short time but the story was "okay". Mostly I was impressed with her prose but didn't find the story or the character compelling or memorable. Read this mainly because it was short listed for the Booker Prize and was on notable book list from 2012.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Beautifully written story about love, passion, poetry, and ways that the seemingly normal surface routines of life can conceal secrets. The story itself is a relatively standard one about a British family's French vacation--and the disruption caused by a beautiful, young, disturbed woman who they find swimming naked in their pool and they unaccountably invite to stay in a spare room in their villa. It is told over the course of a week, with a chapter for each day.

    The story is presented through a kaleidoscopic perspective that shifts the point of vision from character to character, with almost nothing told in the pure omniscient authorial voice so that even the physical descriptions of characters change or become more or less vivid as the perspective shifts.

    It is a very short novella and can easily be read in one or two sittings. It is also very intense, the emotional lives of the characters and the denouement of the story.

    Ultimately, one perspective wins out: that of the daughter of the British couple and an epilogue told years later steps back and provides a perspective on the pivotal week that is the subject of the book itself.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This novel was on the short list for the Man Booker Prize, so I felt obligated to read it twice to make sure I was not missing deep undertones that I assume are present in "serious" literature. The word "ennui" was invented for the people in this novel. The wealthy, world-renowned poet, Jozef, and his journalist wife, Isabel, are "on holiday" in France with their daughter, Nina, and friends (Linda and Mitchell) who can't afford the trip. They swim, they eat, one of them shoots rabbits and tries to catch mice in the act of defiling their food. The poet writes poetry. Into this world of leisure and disconnect stumbles Kitty Finch, an unbalanced botanist prone to wandering around nude and undernourished. She ends up staying with them and their world collapses as her mind fuses with and destroys various members of the group. Her presence forces them to stop hiding from themselves and confront the damage they are doing to their relationships with the people they love. The consequences are disastrous. I do find novels that I enjoy even when I don't like the circumstances portrayed. However this work was not in that category. Perhaps it was too somber and desperate. Although well-written, the connections between the dream states and the realities seemed somewhat obvious. I also didn't understand the presence of Linda and Mitchell. They didn't serve a purpose as far as I could tell other than to take your mind off the main characters and let you rest once in a while. Altogether not a great novel for me but not bad either.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Unfortunately I found I could neither believe, nor take much interest, in any of the characters in this mercifully short novel.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    a very interesting novel, the story of a vacation that went wrong. two families rent a house in France, when they get there they find a very strange naked woman in the swimming pool. The woman is invited to stay there and she ends up being the agent for change.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Books like this are one of the reasons that I like my RL book club. Despite it being short-listed for the Booker Prize in 2012, I would have been pretty unlikely to have chosen this book for myself if I hadn't been doing my book club read of the shortlist. And I am glad I picked it up: despite having some initial misgivings in the first few chapters I thought it was a rewarding read and it warranted its place on the shortlist.Joe and Isabel Jacobs are holidaying in the South of France with their 14 year old daughter Nina, and friends Mitchell and Laura. Returning to their villa they find a young woman swimming naked in their pool. She introduces herself as Kitty Finch, and she explains she has also booked the villa, but there has been a mix-up with the dates and she is waiting for the villa's caretaker to find her a local hotel room. When no hotel room is available for several days, Isabel Jacobs surprisingly asks her to stay at the spare room in the villa. Only later does Kitty Finch confess to Joe Jacobs, a well-known poet, that she has followed him to the South of France in order to persuade him to read her poem. And as the day go by, other aspects of Kitty's behaviour start to become more and more unstable as well.At the start of the book my initial feelings were that these were irritating and arrogant people with whom I did not want to spend time, in particular Mitchell, who is a gun-obsessed obnoxious boor. But as the book progressed, and more and more is revealed this starts to seem a simplistic point of view. The prologue leads the reader to expect an affair between Joe and Kitty, but ultimately Kitty's presence in the villa has effects that stretch out in a far more unexpected direction.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I'd read such great reviews of this book, and waited quite a while till it was available from the library, but I just couldn't see what was so great about it. Couldn't stand the characters, writing ordinary, no real plot. Finally gave up.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very brief. Very tightly written. Very complex. Like all great books, you finish with much to think about it. But it's written in such an economical and subtle style, and it moves so deftly, that you can enjoy it almost ignoring how ominous and affecting it is. Until you can't ignore that at all.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Beautifully written story about love, passion, poetry, and ways that the seemingly normal surface routines of life can conceal secrets. The story itself is a relatively standard one about a British family's French vacation--and the disruption caused by a beautiful, young, disturbed woman who they find swimming naked in their pool and they unaccountably invite to stay in a spare room in their villa. It is told over the course of a week, with a chapter for each day.The story is presented through a kaleidoscopic perspective that shifts the point of vision from character to character, with almost nothing told in the pure omniscient authorial voice so that even the physical descriptions of characters change or become more or less vivid as the perspective shifts.It is a very short novella and can easily be read in one or two sittings. It is also very intense, the emotional lives of the characters and the denouement of the story.Ultimately, one perspective wins out: that of the daughter of the British couple and an epilogue told years later steps back and provides a perspective on the pivotal week that is the subject of the book itself.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I looked at the Booker short list to see if there was anything that might appeal to me aside from the Hilary Mantel I'd already read and this was one of two more I thought I'd like. The story centres around a young woman, Kitty, who suffers from severe depression and who might also have a bit of one or two other conditions as well who arrives at a villa on the French Riviera where two couples along with the daughter of one are staying. One of the men is a poet for whome Kitty has developed an obsession, feeling they connect on an almost mystical level. She's a stranger yet his wife invites her to stay with them all in the villa. The poet and his wife have a crumbling marraige. The husband of the other couple seems loud and obnoxious. The daughter of the poet is quiet and observant and seems to understand what's going on more than all of the adults. I liked the book but I didn't love it. It had a cast of characters that are all different from each other and the requisite clashes and personality differences. It's more a slice of life than an actual "story" with a plot. Some things will change and some things will stay the same.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Not quite sure what to make of this little gem of a book. A holiday, characters that are on course for a terrific crash of some sort, the insidious nature of depression all meet in this tightly structured, brilliantly worded novel. Every word, every scene means something, nothing is wasted. Strange but rather brilliant at the same time. Didn't quite manage to like it, but did admire it and the ending was not at all was I thought it was going to be. The tension in the novel is palpable and at times downright unconformable. So, so glad my holidays are not at all like this one.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The backstory: Swimming Home is on the 2012 Booker Prize shortlist.The basics: This novella explores the life of Kitty, a beautiful, deeply troubled young botanist with a passion for poetry. Set in a summer cottage on the French Riviera in July 1994, Kitty enchants Joe, a famous poet, who is vacationing with his wife, teenage daughter, and a couple of friends.My thoughts: From the first line of this novel, "When Kitty Finch took her hand off the steering wheel and told him she loved him, he no loner knew if she was threatening him or having a conversation," I was enchanted by both Levy's prose and these haunted, curious characters. Levy's crisp, precise prose paints vivid pictures of both the characters and setting. This novella is slight only in pages, but it packs an incredible literary and emotional punch.This novella was a page turner. Levy wowed me with the tightness and beauty of her prose in every single sentence. Rarely do I want to re-read a novel, but the combination of language and story in this novel is a rare delicacy.The verdict: There's a startling intimacy to this novel and its characters. As a reader, I was unsettled as a voyeur witnessing the tragedies unfold in the lives of these tender, haunted characters, but I also loved every word, punctuation mark and sentence. Levy has written a masterpiece, and it's utterly deserving of this year's Booker Prize.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Swimming Home is set in a villa in the French Riviera, where poet Joe Jacobs is vacationing with his wife, Isabel, his daughter, Nina, and their friends, Mitchell and Laura. Everything seems perfectly idyllic until a strange girl named Kitty Finch is found swimming naked in the villa's pool. Kitty pretends to believe that the villa was hers for the week, and Isabel invites her to stay. In reality, Kitty has sought out Joe, who she worships, to look at one of her poems. This lie is just the first in a series of secrets and deceptions that drive Swimming Home forward.Levy makes some interesting choices here, in her writing. Characters frequently believe outlandish things - for example, Kitty is initially mistaken for a bear, dead in the pool, and when Nina goes missing, the adults assume she has been kidnapped, when really she is merely asleep. Kitty is frequently accused of being crazy, but the gullibility and tendency to expect the worst of all the characters makes the entire cast seem a bit off their rockers. Next-door neighbour Dr. Sheridan, caretaker Jurgen, and local Casanova Claude round out the novel with more insanity. Add to this a writing style that is dreamy and trance-like, and Swimming Home feels a bit like that warped picture you get when you open your eyes underwater and look up at the world.Swimming Home is an excellent book, and I am thankful the Booker judges brought it to my attention.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I never really got into the story or cared for the characters. Just not for me.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Deborah Levy was (already) a published author, with no less than five novels, two collections of short stories, 18 plays and a volume of poetry to her name. However, in an interview with Bookslut she complained that most of her books were out of print and that she was working on getting them in print again.Did she experience difficulty getting Swimming home published with her publisher or any other main publishing house? The novel surprisingly came out with And Other Stories an then new publisher that finances book publications by subscription. Was the jury of the Man Booker Prize perhaps positively biased to niche publishers, or did her work stand out in that area of publishing? Would her novel be noticed and equally well received had it been published by her regural publisher Jonathan Cape? If it had been a strategic move by Deborah Levy to publish the novel in this way, she was rewarded beyond measure: the novel was short-listed for the Man Booker Prize and thus the author was catapulted into the limelight. Soon after, her early novels were reissued by Penguin Books.But is Swimming home really such a good book? Far from it! A muddled story, vague characters and no action. Of course, these are characteristics of many postmodern novels. It is obvious that the author is no newby. She knows something about writing, but she knows very little about telling a story, let alone an interesting story. The jury of the Man Booker Prize should be ashamed to have long listed, and then even short listed the book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Die französische Riviera, ein Swimmingpool, zwei verheiratete Paare inklusive einer Tochter und Kitty Finch. Letztere ist zu Beginn nackt und regungslos in jenem Schwimmbecken anzutreffen, das zum Bungalow gehört, den sich die beiden Familien für den Sommer gemietet haben. Wie sich bald herausstellt, hat Kitty einige Rechnungen offen: mit der älteren Dame von Nebenan, die das Treiben rund um den Pool aus nächster Nähe beobachten kann oder mit Joe Jacobs, einem erfolgreichen Dichter. Dessen Frau wiederum, Isabel, war es, die Kitty zum Bleiben einlud. Und so nehmen die Dinge ihren Lauf und der Leser ahnt ab der ersten Minute, dass das alles nicht gut ausgehen kann. Tut es auch nicht. Faszinierend übrigens, wie ein Gedicht, das der Leser nie zu Gesicht bekommt, eine derartige Wirkung auf den Handlungsverlauf bekommen kann.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    The story revolves around a man in a trouble marriage who's offered a huge paycheck if he'll write a biography of his bigger than life father-in-law. That would mean looking into the life of Big Bill Mulholland, who is presently a powerful magnate in international communications, oh, and was a legend in the world of espionage. John Glass is regularly a journalist, but when a million dollars is offered up for this book, he accepts the deal. Then he finds the project nearly impossible to begin. He asks around about someone to do research—and then things begin to happen and threats come his way. This is more mystery than I normally go for, but the writing won me over and I much enjoyed the ride the novel gave me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    this book is written so well, it's almost like poetry. two poets try to swim their way home by fighting their inner demons. loved it!!!

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Swimming Home was an odd reading experience for me. It takes place over one week in France as Jozef and Isabel take their 14 year old daughter, Nina, and their friends Laura and Mitchell to a vacation home. Their marriage is already rocky and when they arrive at the vacation home to find the beautiful, naked, and crazy Kitty swimming in the pool you know things are not going to turn out well. The writing in this book is good - kind of dreamy but still powerful descriptions - but I felt that there were so many loose ends still when the book ended that I wasn't quite sure what to make of it. Some of the characters (especially Laura and Mitchell) seemed superfluous, as if Levy started the book thinking they'd be important and then just changed directions. But she did succeed in entangling the lives and thoughts of Jozef, Kitty, and Nina with a lot of artistry. I wonder if the book would have been better either as a short story or as a longer novel.

Book preview

Swimming Home - Deborah Levy

safely.’

SATURDAY

Wild Life

The swimming pool in the grounds of the tourist villa was more like a pond than the languid blue pools in holiday brochures. A pond in the shape of a rectangle, carved from stone by a family of Italian stonecutters living in Antibes. The body was floating near the deep end, where a line of pine trees kept the water cool in their shade.

‘Is it a bear?’ Joe Jacobs waved his hand vaguely in the direction of the water. He could feel the sun burning into the shirt his Hindu tailor had made for him from a roll of raw silk. His back was on fire. Even the roads were melting in the July heatwave.

His daughter, Nina Jacobs, fourteen years old, standing at the edge of the pool in her new cherry-print bikini, glanced anxiously at her mother. Isabel Jacobs was unzipping her jeans as if she was about to dive in. At the same time she could see Mitchell and Laura, the two family friends sharing the villa with them for the summer, put down their mugs of tea and walk towards the stone steps that led to the shallow end. Laura, a slender giantess at six foot three, kicked off her sandals and waded in up to her knees. A battered yellow lilo knocked against the mossy sides, scattering the bees that were in various stages of dying in the water.

‘What do you think it is, Isabel?’

Nina could see from where she was standing that it was a woman swimming naked under the water. She was on her stomach, both arms stretched out like a starfish, her long hair floating like seaweed at the sides of her body.

‘Jozef thinks she’s a bear,’ Isabel Jacobs replied in her detached war-correspondent voice.

‘If it’s a bear I’m going to have to shoot it.’ Mitchell had recently purchased two antique Persian handguns at the flea market in Nice and shooting things was on his mind.

Yesterday they had all been discussing a newspaper article about a ninety-four-kilo bear that had walked down from the mountains in Los Angeles and taken a dip in a Hollywood actor’s pool. The bear was on heat, according to the Los Angeles Animal Services. The actor had called the authorities. The bear was shot with a tranquilliser gun and then released in the nearby mountains. Joe Jacobs had wondered out loud what it was like to be tranquillised and then have to stumble home. Did it ever get home? Did it get dizzy and forgetful and start to hallucinate? Perhaps the barbiturate inserted inside the dart, also known as ‘chemical capture’, had made the bear’s legs shake and jerk? Had the tranquilliser helped the bear cope with life’s stressful events, calming its agitated mind so that it now pleaded with the authorities to throw it small prey injected with barbiturate syrups? Joe had only stopped this riff when Mitchell stood on his toe. As far as Mitchell was concerned it was very, very hard to get the arsehole poet known to his readers as JHJ (Joe to every one else except his wife) to shut the fuck up.

Nina watched her mother dive into the murky green water and swim towards the woman. Saving the lives of bloated bodies floating in rivers was probably the sort of thing her mother did all the time. Apparently television ratings always went up when she was on the news. Her mother disappeared to Northern Ireland and Lebanon and Kuwait and then she came back as if she’d just nipped down the road to buy a pint of milk. Isabel Jacobs’ hand was about to clasp the ankle of whoever it was floating in the pool. A sudden violent splash made Nina run to her father, who grasped her sunburnt shoulder, making her scream out loud. When a head emerged from the water, its mouth open and gasping for breath, for one panicked second she thought it was roaring like a bear.

A woman with dripping waist-length hair climbed out of the pool and ran to one of the plastic recliners. She looked like she might be in her early twenties, but it was hard to tell because she was frantically skipping from one chair to another, searching for her dress. It had fallen on to the paving stones but no one helped her because they were staring at her naked body. Nina felt light-headed in the fierce heat. The bittersweet smell of lavender drifted towards her, suffocating her as the sound of the woman’s panting breath mingled with the drone of the bees in the wilting flowers. It occurred to her she might be sun-sick, because she felt as if she was going to faint. In a blur she could see the woman’s breasts were surprisingly full and round for someone so thin. Her long thighs were joined to the jutting hinges of her hips like the legs of the dolls she used to bend and twist as a child. The only thing that seemed real about the woman was the triangle of golden pubic hair glinting in the sun. The sight of it made Nina fold her arms across her chest and hunch her back in an effort to make her own body disappear.

‘Your dress is over there.’ Joe Jacobs pointed to the pile of crumpled blue cotton lying under the recliner. They had all been staring at her for an embarrassingly long time. The woman grabbed it and deftly slipped the flimsy dress over her head.

‘Thanks. I’m Kitty Finch by the way.’

What she actually said was I’m Kah Kah Kah and stammered on for ever until she got to Kitty Finch. Everyone couldn’t wait for her to finish saying who she was.

Nina realised her mother was still in the pool. When she climbed up the stone steps, her wet swimming costume was covered in silver pine needles.

‘I’m Isabel. My husband thought you were a bear.’

Joe Jacobs twisted his lips in an effort not to laugh.

‘Of course I didn’t think she was a bear.’

Kitty Finch’s eyes were grey like the tinted windows of Mitchell’s hire car, a Mercedes, parked on the gravel at the front of the villa.

‘I hope you don’t mind me using the pool. I’ve just arrived and it’s sooo hot. There’s been a mistake with the rental dates.’

‘What sort of mistake?’ Laura glared at the young woman as if she had just been handed a parking ticket.

‘Well, I thought I was staying here from this Saturday for a fortnight. But the caretaker . . .’

‘If you can call a lazy stoned bastard like Jurgen a caretaker.’ Just mentioning Jurgen’s name brought Mitchell out in a disgusted sweat.

‘Yeah. Jurgen says I’ve got the dates all wrong and now I’m going to lose my deposit.’

Jurgen was a German hippy who was never exact about anything. He described himself as ‘a nature man’ and always had his nose buried in Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse.

Mitchell wagged his finger at her. ‘There are worse things than losing your deposit. We were about to have you sedated and driven up to the mountains.’

Kitty Finch lifted up the sole of her left foot and slowly pulled out a thorn. Her grey eyes searched for Nina, who was still hiding behind her father. And then she smiled.

‘I like your bikini.’ Her front teeth were crooked, snarled into each other, and her hair was drying into copper-coloured curls. ‘What’s your name?’

‘Nina.’

‘Do you think I look like a bear, Nina?’ She clenched her right hand as if it was a paw and jabbed it at the cloudless blue sky. Her fingernails were painted dark green.

Nina shook her head and then swallowed her spit the wrong way and started to cough. Everyone sat down. Mitchell on the ugly blue chair because he was the fattest and it was the biggest, Laura on the pink wicker chair, Isabel and Joe on the two white plastic recliners. Nina perched on the edge of her father’s chair and fiddled with the five silver toe-rings Jurgen had given her that morning. They all had a place in the shade except Kitty Finch, who was crouching awkwardly on the burning paving stones.

‘You haven’t anywhere to sit. I’ll find you a chair.’ Isabel wrung the ends of her wet black hair. Drops of water glistened on her shoulders and then ran down her arm like a snake.

Kitty shook her head and blushed. ‘Oh, don’t bother. Pah pah please. I’m just waiting for Jurgen to come back with the name of a hotel for me and I’ll be off.’

‘Of course you must sit down.’

Laura, puzzled and uneasy, watched Isabel lug a heavy wooden chair covered in dust and cobwebs towards the pool. There were things in the way. A red bucket. A broken plant pot. Two canvas umbrellas wedged into lumps of concrete. No one helped her because they weren’t quite sure what she was doing. Isabel, who had somehow managed to pin up her wet hair with a clip in the shape of a lily, was actually placing the wooden chair between her recliner and her husband's.

Kitty Finch glanced nervously at Isabel and then at Joe, as if she couldn’t work out if she was being offered the chair or being forced to sit in it. She wiped away the cobwebs with the skirt of her dress for much too long and then finally sat down. Laura folded her hands in her lap as if preparing to interview an applicant for a job.

‘Have you been here before?’

‘Yes. I’ve been coming here for years.’

‘Do you work?’ Mitchell spat an olive pip into a bowl.

‘I sort of work. I’m a botanist.’

Joe stroked the small shaving cut on his chin and smiled at her. ‘There are some nice peculiar words in your profession.’

His voice was surprisingly gentle, as if he intuited Kitty Finch was offended by the way Laura and Mitchell were interrogating her.

‘Yeah. Joe likes pe-cu-li-ar words cos he’s a poet.’ Mitchell said ‘peculiar’ as if imitating an aristocrat in a stupor.

Joe leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes. ‘Ignore him, Kitty.’ He sounded as if he had been wounded in some inexplicable way. ‘Everything is pe-cu-li-ar to Mitchell. Strangely enough, this makes him feel superior.’

Mitchell stuffed five olives into his mouth one after the other and then spat out the pips in Joe’s direction as if they were little bullets from one of his minor guns.

‘So in the meantime’ – Joe leaned forward now – ‘perhaps you could tell us what you know about cotyledons?’

‘Right.’ Kitty’s right eye winked at Nina when she said ‘right’. ‘Cotyledons are the first leaves on a seedling.’ Her stammer seemed to have disappeared.

‘Correct. And now for my favourite word . . . how would you describe a leaf?’

‘Kitty,’ Laura said sternly, ‘there are lots of hotels, so you’d better go and find one.’

When Jurgen finally made his way through the gate, his silver dreadlocks tied back in a ponytail, he told them every hotel in the village was full until Thursday.

‘Then you must stay until Thursday.’ Isabel said this vaguely, as if she didn’t quite believe it. ‘I think there’s a spare room at the back of the house.’

Kitty frowned and leaned back in her new chair.

‘Well, yeah. Thanks. Is that OK with everyone else? Please say if you mind.’

It seemed to Nina that she was asking them to mind. Kitty Finch was blushing and clenching her toes at the same time. Nina felt her own heart racing. It had gone hysterical, thumping in her chest. She glanced at Laura and saw she was actually wringing her hands. Laura was about to say she did mind. She and Mitchell had shut their shop in Euston for the entire summer, knowing the windows that had been smashed by thieves and drug addicts at least three times that year would be smashed again

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