
- Free Article: No
- Contents Category: Fiction
- Custom Article Title: Judith Loriente reviews 'In the Mood' by Laura Bloom
- Review Article: Yes
- Article Title: In the mood
- Online Only: No
- Custom Highlight Text:
Soon after the end of World War II, Robert Booker, husband of Catherine, returns from service in New Guinea to their home in Sydney. It is immediately apparent that their relationship has deteriorated. With Catherine’s hasty disposal of a telegram from an American soldier named Lewis, we learn that she has had an affair, and also a child, in Robert’s absence. The story then moves back to 1944, when the liaison began. Eventually it returns to the present, and Catherine has a hard time concealing her affair and child from her husband.
- Book 1 Title: In the Mood
- Book 1 Biblio: Viking, $32.95 pb, 336 pp
Novels about World War II proliferate. In the Mood is not among the best of them, nor the worst. The tale of a woman who has an affair with an American soldier, then has to deal with the fallout, is not particularly original. Originality is hardly a prerequisite for fiction, so this need not have mattered had In the Mood been a riveting read, with a captivating heroine living in vivid postwar Sydney.
Catherine, however, is hard to warm to – not due to any particular readerly dislike, but due to indifference. The same goes for the two men in her life and for the thinly drawn minor characters. As for the story itself, the slow-moving narrative was frustrating. The overuse of exclamation points and misuse of modifiers grated.
It is, however, possible that some readers will not be bothered by these things. If people are partial to romantic postwar tales about women who succumb to temptation, and then have to keep secrets from their returned servicemen husbands, I am sure that they will not be disappointed. Especially if they like the sort where everything goes right in the end.
Comments powered by CComment