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The Facts of Life | 
enlarge | Author: Patrick Gale Publisher: Flamingo Category: Book
List Price: £15.99 Buy Used: £1.65 You Save: £14.34 (90%)
Used (14) Collectible (2) from £1.65
Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 495474
Media: Hardcover Pages: 512
ISBN: 0002245221 EAN: 9780002245227 ASIN: 0002245221
Publication Date: June 5, 1995 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: creases to corners of cover
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
A great book with a bad cast! May 26, 2008 Philip Thompson (London) Another great book by Gale but what I get again is a cast of characters that I don't care about and could quite easily dislike! A very good story but why oh why aren't these people likeable? This is Gales biggest weakness, a cast of brilliant characters that no one likes. In future make me care!
I might be out of step with the other reviewers here, but this is my favourite Gale novel! April 23, 2008 Phil Shanklin (Isle of Wight UK) I recently bought a copy of Patrick Gale's latest novel "Notes From An Exhibition" and I thought before reading it I'd re-read this book as it has always been my favourite of Gale's novels and made a real impression on me when I read it back in the mid 90's. At first I felt disappointed, I'd had this book taking up space on my bookshelves for over ten years and it really wasn't doing much for me, but then, and I think this is one of Gale's skills as a storyteller, it began to draw me in and I found myself really caring for characters I hadn't particularly liked at the start of the book. And once the author has drawn you in and you begin to care he starts to put you through the emotional wringer - one moment I was laughing aloud the next I felt like crying. There's an air of melancholic nostalgia which permeates the whole book and which is absolutely beautiful. Three generations of the Pepper family live or stay at The Roundel in this novel which spans from the post-war years to the present day. The house is given to Sally Pepper, a doctor, by a childless woman friend with the proviso that it continues to be passed down the female line of the family, but interestingly enough, it is the male characters on which the house seems to exert more of its influence, particularly Sally's husband, Edward who lives in the grounds for the duration of the novel and for whom it is an escape from the harsh realities of his past, as a German Jew and also for his grandson, Jamie, who uses the house to escape from the realities of his present, as he uses it as a retreat whilst suffering from AIDS. It is extremely well-written and fully deserves its place on my bookshelf where it will now be going back on the space it left waiting to be re-read again at some point in the future. It still remains my favourite of Patrick Gale's novels (with "Rough Music" coming in second) and it has made me look forward to reading the new one.
An engrossing epic December 12, 2007 ryan hurney 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Like Gale's most famous novel, 'Rough Music', 'The Facts of Life' features two narratives several years apart concerning the same family. While the two threads are not interweaved in the same way as 'Rough Music', and do not have the same obvious link, both prove gripping reads, and the strong characterisation of Edward Pepper is retained throughout. As is common in Gale's work, a key theme is homosexuality and its complexities, but it would be unfair to pigeonhole this purely as 'gay literature' - anyone who appreciates strong storytelling will enjoy this novel. The contrasts between Edward and Jamie, the similarities between Sally and Alison and the three key deaths all provide particularly strong moments; and fans of Joan Collins are sure to indulge in a wry grin at the character of Myra Toye...
A great, involving read January 5, 2004 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Over the past year I've been working my way through Patrick Gale's novels. Yes, Rough Music is his masterpiece but you can't compare everything to it (see other reviews). I thought this book was very moving. It is two stories and at times I couldn't really see any reason for putting them in one volume but as you get nearer the end of the second part you see that stories from both parts mirror each other. The Holocoust and AIDs, a grandfather and his grandson both in hospital and mercy killings. These things go towards making up the "facts of life". And maybe the novel also offers different ways of surviving: blocking things out,loving too much, living through other people or just passing through as the Hollywood star does. My only complaint is that Mr Gale doesn't tie up all the ends of the novel but maybe this is deliberate. It means that you keep the lives of his characters in your mind and plot what you think should have happened. I won't give anythnig away but Alison, you must tell him! It's about time one of Mr Gale's books was dramatised for tv and if a producedr could successfully link the two partsthis would make a great start (or what about A Sweet Obsucrity?)
Bewildering... December 30, 2003 Araluen (UK) 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Like many of the other reviewers of this book I found it a struggle to gather together the broken strings of Part 1 and Part 2. To be totally honest, reading the whole book was a struggle. The characters did not involve me - although the love story in Part 1 was touching I didn't feel bothered by whether anyone lived and died. The death through AIDS was honestly and touchingly written, and painful to read, and the love story between the two young men poignant, but the comparison of HIV to the Holocaust was pretty offensive, and as a result I consumed the rest of the book with distaste. Not only was the plot shallow and exceedingly contrived in places, I felt like I was watching people of cardboard performing on a cheap stage.I tend to think of a good novel as one that affects me long after I've finished - and this one didn't bother me at all. And what's with all that vegetable nonsense? What Jamie and Sam did with the broccoli, I shudder to think. Sorry Gale but that's pretty unfeasible (and unpalatable) stuff - not to mention unnecessary. It's a shame when an author turns to bizarre sex in an attempt to keep his readers occupied.
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