Philip Hensher, The Northern Clemency Review

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Harriet Klausner's Review of Philip Hensher, The Northern Clemency

16th Nov 2008

Overall Rating

5 stars
  • Value for money
    5 stars
  • Format
    Hardback

The Northern Clemency
Philip Hensher
Knopf, Nov 2008, $26.95
ISBN: 9781400044481

In 1974, the Sellars brood leaves hip London for suburban ennui in Sheffield in the inappropriately named South Yorkshire as they trek to the north. The two Sellars sisters, reticent Francis and extroverted Sandra are concerned that life in the burbs will prove boring as the former loves music and the latter loves swinging London.

Their neighbors, the Glover family consists of two parents and three kids. Patriarch Malcolm is outraged when he finds evidence that his wife Katherine is having an affair. As for the children, bookworm Jane conceals from everyone she is writing a novel; Daniel's brain consists of one icon sex with any carbon bearing species; and the youngest preadolescent Tim is friendlier with snakes than people.

One decade later, the kids are away from home either at universities or working. The empty nest syndrome is compounded with employment issues for the older generation as their hobs die and the new economy begins to shape everyone. Into the nineties, the children as adults live around the world, but come home as often as they can seek solace.

This is an interesting family drama that showcases two families during the Thatcher Era. Each of the ensemble cast is fully developed as readers see them all from multiple perspectives. Although the storyline is extremely passive, fans will relish this deep character study of two generations struggling in different ways to survive the Conservative period, a time of technology and dramatically changing globalization (Thomas Friedman's 'The World Is Flat' comes to mind although much of his treatise occurs after the events of 'The Northern Clemency') in which the older generation feels hopelessly lost and left behind and their offspring disillusioned and unhappy.

Harriet Klausner

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