Reviews

Possession by Celia Fremlin

bunnieslikediamonds's review against another edition

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4.0

Keeping up appearances in suburbia while battling your daughter's mother-in-law from hell - such fun! Clare, respectable wife and mother of two does a great job, and half the fun in this domestic suspense novel is seeing her trying to keep it all together with well-intentioned lies. Fascinating peek into parent-child relationships in the late sixties. Creepy as hell.

comedywriter's review against another edition

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5.0

Master of psychological suspense.

xterminal's review

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2.0

Celia Fremlin, Possession (Pocket, 1969)

This, the debut novel by a woman who's since gone on to pen close to a hundred more, should have been a barnburner. The plot is simple and easy to work with (family watches daughter fall in love with chap with overbearing mother-- shades of Bloch, Hintze, et al.), the twists are intriguing (the main character's friend, whose house is always full of interesting strangers); etc. Fremlin had a lot of really good ingredients, and is capable of writing scintillating prose when she wants to; every five pages or so a sentence or a paragraph would make me stop cold and marvel at the quality of this woman's writing. The problem is, once every five pages or so isn't enough to make the book shine, especially when it's under two hundred pages. So I ended up dropping this one into the "wasted potential" file. It showed enough promise that I'll probably attempt to pick up a few of her later works and see if she ever put it all together properly, but it didn't work in this one. * 1/2
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