Warm-hearted, comic first novel in which a woman looks back at her family history, from 1940s Yorkshire, through 70s suburbia, to her present-day marriage to a geneticist.
Family, n. 1. A fundamental social group in society typically consisting of one or two parents and their children.
Family, n. 4. A locally independent organized crime unit.
Family, n., (biology) 5. A taxonomic group containing one or more genera.
Is biology destiny?
At a finger buffet held at 24 Beech Drive on the day of Charles and Diana's wedding, Rebecca Monroe's mother locked herself in the bathroom and never came out. Was it because her squidgy chocolate log collapsed? Because Rebecca's grandmother married her first cousin? Or can we never know why we do what we do? According to Rebecca's scientist husband, our genes control our fate, but Rebecca is less sure. Can science explain everything? Love? Chance? Who shot JR?
Charting her family history, Rebecca discovers that it's not just a habit of quoting proverbs and a recipe for sherry trifle that have been passed down the maternal line. Three generations of mistaken marriages, dubiously fathered children and untimely deaths make up the Monroe family DNA. Is Rebecca simply the next twist in the double spiral? Or is Aunty Suzanne, the women's libber, right? That biology need not be destiny?
Intertwining relationships between husbands and wives, mothers and daughters, sisters and aunts, go to the heart of this tragicomic history of one British family; where Man about the House and The Joy of Sex conjoin with family life and the scientific method, Carole Cadwalladr asks the most fundamental of questions: who, how and why we are.