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review 2019-03-07 18:20
Be Our Guest, Be Our Guest, Put Our Service to the Test...
The Paying Guests - Sarah Waters

So I really enjoyed "The Little Stranger" and wanted to read more Sarah Waters books. I picked up "The Paying Guests" and found it hard to get into initially. Just like I did with "The Little Stranger." However, Waters takes her time building up the story and you eventually get into the rhythm of the book. I really liked the main character, Frances Wray, and the setting of the story (1920s England) really works. 

 

Frances Wray and her mother end up having to take in guests at their estate on Champion Hill. Though this is not the thing that those of the upper classes do, Frances's mother has no choice after the death of her father and her brothers. Eventually Lillian and Leonard Barber end up moving in as lodgers or the so called paying guests in the title. The book is a slow burn at first with Lilian becoming friends with Frances and then they fall in love with each other. 

 

Frances of course was raised to think that girls like her don't go around falling in love with other women. Frances is in her twenties and already had one female lover (Christina) that she gave up. The book takes a sharp look at the class distinctions too between Frances and Lillian. I also thought "The Little Stranger" did a good job with showing how the world had changed the way the classes were seen after World War II, but there were still hints of snobbery of those who had to "work." Since this book takes place in the 1920s, the distinct classes are still solidly in place. 

 

I sympathized with Frances a lot while reading, because she's in love with Lillian, and I honestly don't think that Lillian was in love with her. Though at times I did feel for Lillian who was also raised girls/women don't go around falling in love with each other. Lillian has a very real fear of being found out, and once again its' the 1920s, I think women could still be locked up for things like this as being found to be abnormal. 

 

I thought the secondary characters like Christina, Stevie, etc. were great. You have Frances getting a glimpse of the way her life could go and I felt sad for her. I honestly ended up like Frances mother in the end due to her just seeing the house as just bricks and mortar. After everything Frances and her mother had done to ensure that they kept the home, it was a bit ironic. 

 

I really loved the writing and like Waters style. The flow was a little slow at first as I already said. I found myself having to force read til the 20 percent mark because I just didn't find myself being engrossed by the book like I should have been. I honestly think that most of the book was slow and doesn't pick up until we get towards the last 1/3 of the book. The book also changes tracks slightly though when a murder is thrown in. Once again I recalled similarities to "The Little Stranger" here and there, but with "The Paying Guests" we are given the ability to watch how courts operated in England back then with a court case happening at the Old Bailey. 

 

Image result for the old bailey

 


‘What an unlucky house this has been for men, hasn’t it? Or unlucky for women, I suppose I ought to say. I know your brothers are at peace now.’

 

‘Well, don’t think about it now. We’ll sort it out, between us. It’s only a lot of bricks and mortar. Its heart stopped, Frances, years ago . . . You look tired again. This frightful business at the court! I wish you’d keep away from it. You really think it will end tomorrow?’


The book setting is the 1920s in Camberwell and Waters definitely makes the times come alive. I think it was a smart way to show the way the world has gone on since The Great War. We have a lot of men and boys who have died and many women who are left behind trying to pick up the pieces. When the war was over many women had a hard time with giving up the freedom they experienced while the men were gone. I think that was a pretty common experience for women in the U.S. too. 

 

The ending was a surprise and I have to say that I thought it was a bit weak. I wanted to know more and don't know if Waters was saying that Frances was being naive or what. 

 

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review 2017-09-27 22:40
The Paying Guests - Sarah Waters

I really liked Sarah Waters' writing, beautiful prose. But I found the plot to this to be very cliche and predictable with characters I found to be dull and cardboard at best, and downright unlikable at worst. Because of this, I had a really hard time sympathizing with their troubles and struggles when they happened later on in the book. I'm definitely interested in reading more Sarah Waters, for her writing alone, since if many other authors had written this story, I'm pretty sure I wouldn't have even finished it at all, that and the performance on the audiobook was also fantastic.

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review 2016-12-26 17:27
The Paying Guests
The Paying Guests - Sarah Waters

The Paying Guests is my third Sarah Waters book and eventhough her other books aren´t perfect, at least they have been compelling reads. But this book I found to be incredibly dull and boring. The story in a nutshell: moping, moping, doing house chores, moping, more house cleaning, falling in love, being miserable and heartbroken, more moping, sex, drama, drama, drama, even more moping whilst being in a moral dilemma, the end (which is a lacklustre one, btw). 

I might have enjoyed the story more if I felt sympathetic towards the two main characters. But these two are horrible people, so not even the ending has been a satisfactory for me. I´m hugely disappointed by this book.

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review 2016-04-25 17:49
The Paying Guests by Sarah Waters - My Thoughts
The Paying Guests - Sarah Waters

Thank God that's over with!

 

I don't know what I was expecting when everyone was recommending Sarah Waters to me.  More mystery-like, I think.  The blurbs and all mention the world thriller, but I just don't see it.  

 

First off, I have to say that Sarah Waters does write well.  She is definitely a talent.  But man... this book.... this effing book.  

 

I disliked all the characters... all of them.  Not a single one was sympathetic.  Not even the dog.  There was so much woe is me, woe is me throughout the book that it even permeated the very few moments when things were supposed to be joyful.  Now, I get that in the 1920's, right after The Great War, things were not unicorns and rainbows for impoverished, lesbian spinsters, but my Lord,  surely to God, a wee bit of happiness or even positivity or even a glimmer of HOPE shouldn't have been impossible.

 

I don't even know what the point was of the story other than to highlight the bleakness of existence for all these people, not just the main characters.

 

Well, I'm glad I made it through and I'm glad it's over.  The only reason I didn't DNF this was that so many people and places whose opinions I respect were big on it.  

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review 2015-08-04 00:00
The Paying Guests
The Paying Guests - Sarah Waters Loved the first part for the setting - historical and situational - and the psychologically true portraits; liked the somewhat arduous, plot-driven second part, and the non-ending, far less. I'm giving [b:The Paying Guests|20821087|The Paying Guests|Sarah Waters|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1396671788s/20821087.jpg|26164907] four stars mainly because it was technically well-executed where [b:The Miniaturist|18498569|The Miniaturist|Jessie Burton|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1392415313s/18498569.jpg|25328659] I've finished just before fell terribly short.
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