Ripeness Ripeness

Ripeness

    • 3.5 • 2 Ratings
    • $16.99

Publisher Description

It is the 60s and, just out of school, Edith finds herself travelling to rural Italy. She has been sent by her mother with strict instructions: to see her sister, ballet dancer Lydia, through the final weeks of her pregnancy, help at the birth and then make a phone call which will seal this baby’s fate, and his mother’s.

Decades later, happily divorced and newly energized, Edith is living a life of contentment and comfort in Ireland. When her best friend Maebh receives a call from an American man claiming to be her brother, Maebh must decide if she will meet him, and she asks Edith for help.

Ripeness is an extraordinary novel about familial love and the communities we create, about migration and new beginnings, and about what it is to have somewhere to belong.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2025
27 May
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
160
Pages
PUBLISHER
Pan Macmillan UK
SELLER
Macmillan Publishers Australia and Pan Macmillan Australia
SIZE
867.6
KB

Customer Reviews

rhitc ,

Over ripe

The author is British. Born in Glasgow, educated at Oxford, she has held multiple academic positions in creative writing in the UK and is currently Assoc Prof at University College, Dublin. Ms M has published eight previous novels and two memoirs, as well as a number of non-fiction works and academic texts, and received numerous awards for her writing.

Twin first person narratives by Edith, the first as a teenager in Northern Italy the 1960s, and the other as a divorced septuagenarian in rural Ireland in contemporary times.

Young Edith has completed her schooling while living with her father in rural England and has been accepted at Oxford but he thinks she’s too young to go yet. Her mother, an avant garde artist who lives in Paris, dispatches her to Italy to care for her (unmarried) older sister Lydia, a ballet dancer, during pregnancy and confinement.

Older Edith serves as support person for her friend Méabh, who has been contacted by a man in the US, who claims to be her brother, given up fir adoption when her mother was 15.

Did I mention Edith was Jewish and lost family members in the holocaust?

The stream-of-consciousness style narratives move along nicely in the hands of Ms Moss, who is a superb stylist. Not a lot happens apart from navel gazing. Themes include love, marriage, divorce, family etc.

Bottom line
Worth reading for the prose. Similar page count to Summerwater (2020), but felt longer.

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