Catrin (46, a piano teacher) and John (who left school at 14) run a farm in Wales which is struggling. Their relationship is struggling too. They've 2 sons. Rhys is 16, and Harri, a soldier, has just started a 6 month stint in Iraq having got a degree from Bangor. Their dog Flint is getting old. Catrin's widowed mother Alice still lives in the house where Catrin grew up. She's always thought that John wasn't good enough for her daughter. John's dad died after a tractor accident and later his mother died. The farm's been in the family for generations.
So the scene is set for wife/husband aspirational conflict, with the sons as pieces in the game as well as observers. Sections are mostly Catrin's or John's 3rd person PoV. They begin with quotes from "The Report of the Iraq Inquiry". On p.25 for example it says that Fallujah "was 'littered' with IEDs which would need to be located and made safe before reconstruction could begin in earnest" which could be an analogy for their relationship. Landscape and rural life form an expressive backdrop - there are sections where knowledge about farming, fishing, or hunting shows.
John is drinking and gambling - the banks are sending warning letters. Tim is an old friend with a much bigger farm. Catrin asks if he'd buy the farm off them. She sees Matt in town for the first time in years. They were at school and Uni together. He was an artist and they'd thought of sharing a creative life together before he'd left for London. They start having sex. John tells Catrin about his gambling.
John and Rhys ride in the last hunt before the ban. Matt is separated, with two daughters. "Catrin catches Matt watching the young man as he walks away and she wonders if the rumours that had circled at university had any substance".
On p.135 we read that the Iraq situation "could destabilise the Middle East, create a safe haven for international terrorists and damage the reputation and morale of the UK defence forces". John is angry that they can find no weapons of mass destruction. Harri's letters home are full of nostalgia.
Bailiffs arrive. They go off with her much loved piano. She phones her mother for help only to find that she's already given John £8k. John hints to Steff that he knows about her affair. So they both feel guilt.
Harri returns for 2 weeks - his 3rd-person PoV. During his stay he gets his father to go to Gambler's Anonymous (by telling him about far worse experiences in Iraq), talks to Rhys about his school behaviour (Rhys says it was caused by rumours about Harri), pays off bits of his father's loans, and continues his long-felt passion for farm-hand Simon.
When Matt returns to London he invites Catrin down for the opening of his show, suggesting she should stay the night. At the show there's arty-chitchat and bitchy comments about Matt - that he'd sleep with anything that has two legs. His wife slashes a painting. Steff leaves immediately. Her menopause is starting. They meet some weeks later at Llandudno. He tries to explain himself. She breaks it off. When he gets in his car John gets in too, with a sawn-off shotgun. He scares Matt, then leaves.
He accepts Tim's generous offer for part of the land. The dog's dying. Catrin and John ride horses together while The Grand National is on, to distrast him. She feels a little better - maybe thing will work out. He and Alice have got her piano back. While she plays a piece she's being composing during Harri's time away, the phone rings.
It's years later. We're led to believe that Harri is dead. Rhys (who's about to marry) and Simon are helping with the farm. They've opened a Rehab Centre for Soldiers, and accommodation. Harri is in a wheelchair. Everybody seems content. The farm and family have survived.
Other reviews
- republic of words (Books on recent history need to tread a thin line between over-familiarity ... and avoidance ..., and Dastur attempts to do both by quoting from contemporary sources on the Iraq War to give a sense of what those at home would know of what was happening on the ground. It doesn’t quite work, leaving much of Harri’s tale on the cutting room floor, but it does offer the sense that his parents are in a purgatory not of their own making.)
- Goodreads