Cover Image: So Much More the Man

So Much More the Man

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Member Reviews

Philip is an English teacher in Worcester, nearing retirement. Feeling melancholy, as another academic year approaches, he looks back with sadness at his life because, although happy and successful, it has been unremarkable. He compares himself to the characters in the literature he has taught and wishes his life had been more exciting. In this mood, he encounters Jane - a lost love from 40 years ago who dropped him abruptly after they played Macbeth and Lady Macbeth in an outdoor production in Jersey in 1977. With Jane suddenly back in his life, Philip struggles with new temptations and powerful memories. Forty years ago, Jane's power over Philip reflected that of Lady Macbeth's power over Macbeth, and in 2018 she seems to exert a similar influence. She persuades him to visit her in London, and Philip troubled though he is by being dishonest to his wife, can't resist the temptation. Over lunch with Jane and her daughter, Annie, Jane drops the bombshell that Philip was Annie's father. Jane, wielding her power, incites conflict between her husband and Philip who starts to believe he is Macbeth again. Relishing playing such a dramatic role, he is becoming the tragic hero from literature he has wanted to be, rather than the man who has lived an ordinary, unexceptional life. But will it all end in a terrible tragedy?
Fantastic read

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This novel is like a box of chocolates, or so Forrest Gump would have said. It is all about life and the unexpected things that can change us. It is profoundly moving and thought-provoking.
Stephan Le Marchand decorates his narrative with allusions to A Streetcar Named Desire, Twelfth Night, The Great Gatsby, Brief Encounter, and in particular Macbeth. Anyone who knows their literature will particularly enjoy this book but it has a compelling voice all its own and brought tears to my eyes.

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