Reviews

The Nutmeg Tree by Margery Sharp

lvw22's review

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3.0

3 1/2* The Nutmeg Tree is definitely a light read, but I thoroughly enjoyed this an old-fashioned and completely charming English comedy of manners from 1937. I was happy to discover Margery Sharp through my free download from netgalley.com, and look forward to reading more of Sharp.

paula_s's review against another edition

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4.0

Divertida comedia de enredo ambientada en la Provenza francesa en los años treinta. En ella una mujer de vida alegre se hace pasar por una dama respetable para no avergonzar a una hija estirada y bastante puritana, que la necesita.

La primera escena de este libro ya nos muestra el tono a veces disparatado y a veces entrañable que nos vamos a encontrar en esta novela. Nuestra protagonista, Julia, se está dando un baño en su apartamento londinense, cantando “la Marsellesa” a voz en grito mientras sus acreedores aporrean la puerta. Julia no tiene donde caerse muerta, pero es muy ingeniosa y encantadora, así que, para pagarse el pasaje para llegar a la casa donde se encuentra su hija con su suegra, consigue convencer al acreedor de que salde sus deudas y vende los pocos muebles de valor que le quedan. Susan y su suegra, la aristocrática señora Packett, la necesitan.

La señora Packett es todo un personaje. Su hijo era un soldado de permiso cuando tuvo un affair con una mujer del teatro y cuando ésta se quedó embarazada, se casó con ella, para volver al frente y morir. Así pues, la señora Packett y su marido acogieron a Julia y a su hija durante nueve años, donde trataron a la viuda como si fuera su hija. Sin embargo la vida encorsetada de los aristócratas de campo no era para Julia, y pronto dejó a la niña al cuidado de sus abuelos y se fue a Londres a vivir su vida. Hay mujeres que no saben ser madres y eso no las hace malas personas, Julia es así.

Pero ahora la divertida señora Packett ha escrito a Julia para que acuda a hacer frente común con ella porque, de la noche a la mañana, la joven Susan ha conocido a un chico y se quiere casar. Y eso a ella no le parece de recibo. Julia se mete en un embrollo fingiendo que ha llevado una vida intachable en Londres hasta que la mentira se hace tan insostenible que se le viene encima. Con divertidos y románticos resultados.

El entorno de la casa que alquilan es tan hermoso que Julia se ve gravemente influida por las circunstancias y algunos líos en los que le quiere meter su suegra, además están el joven prometido que es un poquito pícaro y el tutor de su hija, que supuestamente vela por los intereses de la joven, aunque en realidad está hasta las narices de todo y quiere retirarse para viajar y ver paisajes.

Esta lectura es una delicia. Es divertida, chispeante, irónica y tiene unos personajes fantásticos. Especialmente Julia, que es tremenda, de principio a fin. El tipo de vida que ha llevado hace que conozca a gente de toda ralea y eso le sirve de herramienta para solventar las situaciones en que se mete (porque, normalmente, se mete ella sola en situaciones) así como para calar al muchacho que se quiere casar con su hija, que es para echarla de comer aparte. El final puede que sea un tanto predecible llegado a un punto, o tal vez no, y quizás esa sea la gracia, saber que todo irá bien, pase lo que pase. Y que la familia unida cuidará de todos sus miembros. Una delicia de principio a fin.

bookitwithbecca's review against another edition

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4.0

A solid 3.5 - Light and entertaining, with just the slightest touch of sentiment. I might have been tempted to bump the rating up to a 4, for the sheer enjoyment of the read, but the abrupt ending left something to be desired.

quietjenn's review

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4.0

Sort of like a Wodehouse novel with a lot more pathos and slightly less chortles. In a good way.

wordnerdy's review against another edition

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3.0

http://wordnerdy.blogspot.com/2018/04/2018-book-67.html

My usual review will be prefaced with a bit of a story; bear with me. I recently read this NYT essay about Sharp, and remembered that this book had been on my to-read list at some point, and then a bunch of Sharp's books went on e-book sale and I bought this (and several others). As soon as I started reading, I recognized the humorous scene opening scene and was puzzled—when had I read this and why hadn’t I finished it? And then, this:


So then I remembered why I stopped last time. But that essay was fresh in my mind and I really did want to read something light and a bit silly—which this, a story about a flighty sort of woman whose daughter summons her to help convince her grandmother to let her get married, and hijinks ensue—was. I mean, aside from some weird comments about Armenians, and a rather abrupt ending. How do I grade a book that is charming except for some casual bigotry? B?

persey's review

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2.0

Preposterous fluff which tries to be deep about it.

extemporalli's review

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4.0

If you like reading English comedies of manners set in the 1930s, this is a one for you. Julia's a light-hearted woman of 36 who left her child years ago, only to be called to France by her daughter, so that said daughter can persuade her grandparents to let her marry her paramour. There are some beautifully comic moments in here as Julia tries very hard to present as 'a lady' in order to not disappoint her daughter, only to be shown up by her daughter's paramour, who is exactly the kind of flaky scammer she recognises herself to be. And, well, that ending was just the best thing.

voya_k's review

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5.0

The Nutmeg Tree is a fantastically light British social comedy from 1937. Theatrical and big-hearted Julia has been happily estranged from her daughter (the product of a WWI-era dalliance with a doomed soldier) for 20 years. Then she receives a letter asking for her assistance with her daughter Susan's pending engagement; Susan's very proper grandmother does not approve of the match! So Julia must journey to a tiny French village near Aix to re-connect with the rich side of the family and to meet this fellow who has captured her daughter's heart.

This book is full of social satire, loving descriptions of fancy bathrooms and explicit details of fashion and millinery. The heroine is in constant danger of receiving dirty postcards from her old friend the acrobat. She also bilks a middle aged man out of a martini and 1000 francs at a casino. It's all very modern and freewheeling.

I cannot understand why Ms. Sharpe's books are now all out of print. She seems to be the very fount from which chick lit sprang. If you can find this, you should totally read it.

jlmb's review against another edition

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3.0

That ending! What the hell? Did the author have a heart attack and die so she couldn't finish the book? Fun read up to the highly unsatisfactory ending. Hmmmph.

abookishtype's review against another edition

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5.0

Margery Sharp’s The Nutmeg Tree has one of the best opening chapters I’ve read in a long time. When we meet Julia Packett (sometimes, but not really, Mrs. Macdermott), she is in the bath tub. She has been there for over an hour. She won’t come out because there are two men outside who want five pounds or they will repossess her rented furniture. By the end of the chapter, Julia has gotten out of the bath—but only after swindling the two men and a pawnbroker. We also learn in the first chapter that Julia has been summoned to France by a daughter she hasn’t see in about twenty years. Susan needs Julia’s help.

Read the rest of my review at A Bookish Type. I received a free promotional copy of this book from the publisher.