Reviews

Grace's Table by Sally Piper

justanotherpageturner's review against another edition

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3.0

BLOG TOUR GRACE’S TABLE

Grace’s Table is based on 70 year old Grace as she prepares for a meal with 12 members of her nearest and dearest. It follows her preparations for the meal with Piper leaving a vivid image in your head of the food and character dynamics. The incredible description and imagery is mouth-watering to say the least! Amongst the detailed accounts of food, Piper has carefully penned a reflection on Grace’s life and the people in it. A very character focussed read, the book primarily deals with relationships and family dynamics in particular parental and child tension. It was a little slow-paced for me personally, but I think this was appropriate for this particular book and the purpose of the story line especially with it being a shorter story.

This book would be perfect for people who enjoy a slower pace or food/cookery based books as these parts were incredibly well written and produced authentic and vivid imagery.

I was gifted this copy by Legend Press in exchange for an honest review on the blog tour.


aeios's review against another edition

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reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

emmafromoz's review against another edition

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4.0

A thoughtful & rewarding read. Grace's 70th birthday lunch is a repast in several ways. We are reminded of the comforts of true friendship & of the undercurrents of tension that can run through any family. The grandchildren provide a refreshing note of ignorance/innocence (the moment when Jorja asks why she should learn to grow her own cherry tomatoes when she can always come & eat her grandmother's is poignant). Grace's responses to her children and to her grandchildren are very different -- and yet the hope that they will escape the traps of the past is deflated somewhat by her children's interactions with their own children. Ultimately uplifting, there are moments of Grace along the way as well as heartbreaking truths. We are reminded that truth is always relative....

bookish_spoonie's review against another edition

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3.0

3 stars

This book is based at Grace's 70th birthday celebrations in her own home. It shows her family coming together and all the tension and love that it brings. Grace reflects on her life and marriage and the turning points that have brought her family to where they are today. There is an underlying anger that we feel throughout the story but also one of love.
It was a quick read at just over 200 pages and I found it quite a calming read. It was entirely character driven and I found myself angry for Grace and wishing he stood up for herself more. It is very intricate and the writing is delicate and almost poetic at times. It reads in a lovely way.
I did need a bit more plot and I wish the ending was slightly more satisfying. It isn't my usual type of read but I did enjoy it.

ceeemvee's review against another edition

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5.0

This is a well-crafted story which takes places on one day, but reminisces about a lifetime. At first, I read a bit of the book, but it seemed mundane and tedious, and I didn't get very far. I came across it again, started reading, and am very glad I did. This isn't a book of thriller endings and plot twists, but an ordinary woman's life examined.

It's Grace's 70th birthday, and as she prepares dinner for her family and close friends, she weaves a tale of her life: childhood, love, marriage, children, friendship. She uses the everyday and special items in her home to spark her memory and tell her story. However, it's a story that can be seen from a different perspective by other family members: “Families were like sand dunes, Grace decided. They shifted shape and position with even the gentlest of forces. Even a tiny puff – a shrug – could bring about change, move a handful of thoughts to a new understanding, a new authority. A gale, like today’s, and whole dunes – lives and futures – were relocated, reimagined.”

Thoroughly enjoyable read.

jesikasbookshelf's review against another edition

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4.0

"Families were like sand dunes, Grace decided. They shifted shape and position with even the gentlest of forces. Even a tiny puff - a shrug - could bring about change, move a handful of thoughts to a new understanding, a new authority. A gale, like today's, and whol dunes - lives and futures - were relocated, reimagined.

So much resentment had percolated undetected in this family for so many years. Each of them had failed to recognise the other's hurt, everyone had believed their suffering was more worthy. So what should they do about these feelings, now that they were out?"


Families are a complex thing, no two are the same and no experience of being in them is the same. I am often strongly reminded of how much my world view is rooted in the livees of the people I go through this world with. And, though we are all often quick to deny it, this is a fundamental fact of all our lives - we are built on the foundations of those before us and those around us. One conversation can change the way you have seen someone you love for decades.

Grace is having her family found for dinner on the occasion of her 70th birthday. My heart broke for her that this was a rarity, which I personally cannot imagine. Over the course of the novel you are pulled into the way Grace sees her family and herself through the lens of their shared past. Her account of them is searingly honest to the point that you fully believeshe is 'right'. But can anyone ever hold the full truth about a complex family? No, not really - we all see each other so differently, remember seminal events differently and it affects how we view ourselves, our unit and the world around us.

Sally Piper explores this with a simple and meaningful narrative looking into the lives of the Baker family. She makes your heart fill with fondness, makes you cry and leaves you needing to hug your Gran in this beautifully written book.

gemma's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional hopeful inspiring lighthearted reflective relaxing sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

alexlogiudice's review against another edition

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emotional reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

rhirhireader's review against another edition

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3.0

What this book does is make you reflect on your own family values and its weaknesses. It's a very short book but has a lot of content in regards to Grace and her past.
Grace is preparing a meal for 12 people with the help of her daughter Susan. Today is her 70th birthday and a good a time as any to visit memory lane.
From the start it's apparent that some people from Grace's life will not be present at her table. Some are not welcome, but others have long gone. Is it possible to be grieving after so long? Is this what Grace is experiencing? Grief? Or something else entirely?
The language of the book is almost poetic with the food references being on almost every page. Food seems to be the magnet that pulls people together in life and I cracked a few smiles here and there because I saw a lot of my parents and grandparents in some of the characters. Life literally does revolve around food doesn't it? So what better setting to have a book than a kitchen and a hungry family.
I wasn't a fan of Susan from the start and felt she was being awful to her mother, but then somewhere in the last 40 pages or so, I began to see what was happening and saw Susan was a woman with different views and perhaps someone who felt loss when what she needed (or who) was right in front of her but they just didn't see it within eachother.
This is a lovely read, it tackles some deep emotions and does it tastefully (seeing as food plays a big part this word is very fitting don't you think?)

Thank you to Lucy at Legend press for sending this paperback to me for exchange of an honest review.

headinthepages's review against another edition

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3.0

This book takes us seamlessly through Grace’s past, as she reflects on the last 70 years of her low, whilst preparing a huge meal for 12 members of her family and friends.
This book is written in a way that gives you Grace’s life story, almost without you realising you’re going through it.

I think Sally Piper writes complex family dynamics so well, all in the small details and conversations people have when they’ve known each other for several decades.

I really enjoyed this book, and thought Grace’s life seemed full and rich and complex.
I almost felt like it snuck up on me, how well I knew this character because it’s done so smoothly!

A great read for anyone who loves character stories, and family dynamics and a bit of drama