A review by valparaiso45
The Road to Grantchester by James Runcie

3.0

This book is a departure for me from my dominant reading tastes, but an enjoyable one nonetheless because of my enjoyment of the Masterpiece mystery series “Grantchester” for which this book is the “prequel”. Here we find the backstory of the show’s central character—Sidney Chambers, a young, English war survivor who decides to become a Vicar in the Church of England after he returns from fighting with the Scots Guards on the Western Front of WWII. He fought in Italy, lost his best friend Robert Kendall, and returns to the friendship of Robert’s sister Amanda, to wrestle with a host of questions about the meaning of his life, his relationship with his guilt, his hope for the future, including Amanda, and his role as a survivor in the face of so much senseless loss.

I find James Runcie’s use of the present tense both unfamiliar and appealing in its immediacy. Runcie also weaves a series of subtle spiritual insights into his narrative which I appreciated for their resonance with questions I have asked about life. I do wish he would have given more depth to the characters, though. They all seem a little flat. Overall it was an enjoyable intro to the series which has a richness to it missing from this “prequel”. The book is somewhat disconnected from the premise of the show, deliberately to be sure, which is focused on an episodic murder mystery while developing the backstory of these characters.

Favorite Quotes:

"You mustn’t dwell. It makes you moody." -Sidney Chambers' mother (5/2/21)