A review by areadingstan
Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit by Jeanette Winterson

dark funny reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

Winterson insists in the introduction of this book, that even though the novel depicts events within her own life, it is just as much fiction as it is fact. 

Jeanette, the protagonist, is adopted from a young age into a Pentecostal Christian family, who are very committed. Her mother is even a missionary, and is raising her daughter to follow in her footsteps. Conflict arises when when Jeanette falls in love with another girl, which, in the 70s, in a community such as this, was quite unacceptable. We can assume the homophobia is present here without Winterson alluding to it, but it becomes more clear when Jeanette is told she cannot visit a paper shop owned by two women because they have, in her mother's words, 'unnatural passions'. This phrase is repeated throughout the novel, as Jeanette starts to express her sexuality, never worrying that she is doing anything wrong, because it comes natural. 

The story is periodically interrupted by parallel fairy tales, with no indication of the change in setting but an asterisk in between paragraphs. Whether Winterson wants her readers to analyse these sprinkles of otherwordly magic or not I am not sure, but it does create a nice contrast, and I love a good fairy tale. 

This book is so witty and made me laugh out loud a fair bit. Notable mentions include
Mrs Arkwright, who owns a shop specialising in bug and vermin poisoning, hoping for a hot summer to boost business. And Jeanette's mum talking about a fizzing feeling she got when meeting a beautiful French man, but it turned out to be a stomach ulcer
.

There are some philosophical and thoughtful musings about our existence, God, and history, which feel like the author is speaking directly to us, maybe because this story takes great inspiration from her own upbringing. 

Overall, I would really recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn more about Winterson's life, and the struggle of growing up as a queer woman in 1970s Britain, with a fair bit of religious satire thrown in. I'm eager to read more of Winterson's work now. 

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