A Dry Spell

by Clare Chambers


Guest Reviewer: John Van der Kiste





Phoenix Book Reviews would like to thank John for his review



John Van der Kiste lives in Devon. A library assistant, former DJ and musician, he has written over twenty books, mostly historical or musical biographies, and reviewed records and books for national and local journals and fanzines.

Read more about John on his website




Two families are both heading for that old early middle-age crisis. Guy Bromelow, a school headmaster, is increasingly uneasy about his neurotic wife Jane, who is tormented by Harriet, their demon of a small daughter, and worried about her sudden frigidity. Meanwhile Nina Osland, having brought up her son James on her own, is alarmed that his girlfriend Kerry is leading him into bad ways and that drugs are going to disrupt his exams.


Then things get even worse when an old university friend (the friend from hell, more like), Hugo Etchells, reappears from the distant past. Some twenty years earlier, when they were all at university, Hugo co-opted Guy, Nina and another student, Martin, on a geography field trip to Africa during the summer of 1976. The venture was cut short by tragedy, but Nina could hardly put the memories behind her for once and for all, as by the time they returned to England she realised she was pregnant with James. Now Hugo, having spent some years in Australia, decides he is coming home for good, and rings Jane and Nina to suggest a get-together for old times sake on his return. Old times that the two women would rather leave undisturbed. As yet they don't know each other, but an unforeseen discovery brings them together for reasons that everyone involved finds hard to accept.


Guy is already troubled enough by his conscience; he fears that he's drifting into atheism, which would sit uneasily with his status as a headmaster. Jane has made good friends with the delightfully scatty Erica Crowe, who lives in a permanent state of blissful chaos with her children (the husband is working in Kuwait), and wonders if she is turning into a lesbian.


At first I found this novel a little disjointed. Two separate families, apparently unconnected, are both going their separate ways. Then there are the flashbacks to Guy's and Hugo's schooldays, followed by Nina's university days, all interwoven with the present-day narrative. About halfway through, everything suddenly falls into place.


It's not a comic novel, though you'd be hard pressed not to laugh at some episodes. A very embarrassed Jane goes to see the doctor, because she's 'gone off it', and Harriet creates havoc as soon as her back is turned. Later on she is having an appalling Sunday lunch with Guy's insufferably snooty parents. Another few chapters, and she invites Erica and the kids round to her house, they end up playing hide-and-seek, and one of them accidentally comes across his headmaster in a state of undress.


These episodes are matched by the high drama of what went wrong on the African trip. Later on there is a tense moment when Jane and Erica, having gone for a day out in the countryside (a kind of parting before the latter goes out to rejoin her husband in Kuwait), have their day wrecked by an ominous call on the mobile phone.


A book which should appeal equally to male and female readers, it could have easily descended into total dullness and fallen flat on its face. The main characters are all pretty middle-class and ordinary, with pretty middle-class and ordinary hang-ups and phobias. But maybe that's what makes the story so credible. The author has a knack of observing and developing characters skilfully, and what could so easily be a very mundane plot suddenly becomes much more.

Publisher: Arrow
ISBN: 0099277646
Price: £6.99 p/b
Date Reviewed: September 2002 2002
John's Rating: 4/5

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