Pearl
About the book
Author: Siân Hughes
Publisher: Knopf
More info:
The StoryGraph | Goodreads
Note: Content and trigger warnings are provided for those who need them at the bottom of this page. If you don’t need them and don’t want to risk spoilers, don’t scroll past the review.
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My Review
Pearl was the last title I read from the 2023 Booker Prize longlist, and what a lovely way to cap things off!
This book is a short but impactful look at grief, motherhood (and mothering in the absence of a mother), mental illness, and the lasting effects of all three. Hughes is a poet, and it shows. She took her whole life to write this book — in many different forms, many different times, until she found the heart of it all — and that shows, too. She’s also said the idea for the book started with a writing exercise in which she wrote about a particularly quirky house along her commute, which evolved into the house that made it into the final version of the book. That book, almost a character in itself, was one of my favorite parts. I also quite liked the ending!
That said, it’s not perfect — while everyone at book club agreed that we liked it, we also agreed that the details slipped right out of our brains like water as soon as we finished reading it. I also wasn’t a big fan of the way the book started in the present day and then permanently switched to the past — I expected it to go back and forth between the timelines. I think that choice slowed some of the book’s momentum, but that’s a relatively minor complaint.
If you are looking for a short but beautifully written little Irish novel, this one is for you.
Content and Trigger Warnings
Death of a parent
Grief
Self-harm (cutting)
Eating disorder (minor depiction)
Mental illness
Child death
Suicide (possible)