A Taste of his own Medicine by Linda Fawke is a
romance with a decidedly dark twist. The plot sees us crisscross from the 1970s
to the present day and Fawke does a good job of drawing us in with her
intriguing tale of revenge.
This is a novel with a lot to recommend, in
particular Fawke’s attention to detail and the way she creates a vivid picture
of university life in the early 70s. The main character Kate Shaw is a
pharmacist and former member of the “class of 75” and Fawke cleverly constructs
her story around Kate’s experience at university and the 30 year anniversary
reunion of her class. Fawke effectively highlights how universities were
changing and becoming more inclusive and accessible to people from lower
socio-economic classes and all of the tensions that came with that.
Fawke also uses her eye for detail to create
characters that we all recognise such as the tight-fisted scrounger, lecherous
womaniser and pompous, self-aggrandizing oaf. My main stumbling block with the
novel, however, is that the negative characters are relentless and there are no
positive characters to offset them.
There’s no doubting that Fawke is a talented
writer and she writes assuredly with total control over her story which is told
almost exclusively in 3rd person narrative. There are a couple of
paragraphs where Fawke switches to 1st person and although I
understand her reasoning for this, for me it jarred with the rest of the story.
Kate Shaw who drives the story is a 50 something
successful workaholic with a string of pharmacies and enough money to afford an
affluent lifestyle. This is in contrast to her humble beginnings when she was
the first member of her family to go to university and her unworldliness is reflected
in the fact that she’s shocked when she sees a gay couple and isn’t used to
eating out or big city life. The diversity of university is a shock to Kate but
instead of immersing herself into it she focuses totally on work. Essentially
Kate is not a likeable character, dismissing other students as “a waste of
space” and anything less than a First as failure.
We warm to Kate slightly when she begins a student
romance with her polar opposite, the unreliable, easy going, part-time male
model, Jonathan Carson. However, when the romance invariably doesn’t last, Kate
seems to become totally unhinged. To such an extent that 30 years later,
despite having been married for over 20 years, she is still harbouring a toxic
grudge which goes on to encompass everyone else she feels did her wrong at
university.
As I mentioned earlier, the main problem I had
with the novel was the overwhelming set of unpleasantly selfish characters. There
is no moral compass to give the self-destructive revenge plot any context.
There are a couple of characters who initially seem to be positive and honest
but by the end even they become embroiled in selfish, disloyal behaviour.
What for me might have made the characters easier
to relate to would have been the use of 1st person and maybe
multiple viewpoints. This might have helped give some humanity to the
characters, particular Kate, who I think the reader really needs to connect
with in some way.
My favourite parts of the novel are the sections
at the reunion which reflect all the humour and farce that tend to go hand in
hand with these kinds of functions. There are lots of comic moments in Fawke’s
description of the goings on and this did serve to detract from the
unpleasantness of Kate’s behaviour.
All in all, I think if you like a dark romance and
enjoy stories of revenge, scheming and intrigue then you will get a lot out of
A Taste of his own Medicine. I suspect that I just didn’t connect with it in
the way that other readers might. And, as always with reviews, it’s merely a
personal response and I look forward to reading what other readers make of this
well written tale of settling scores.
Thank you E.L.
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