The Clematis Tree

The Clematis Tree

by Ann Widdecombe (Author)

Synopsis

Mark and Claire seem an ideal couple. He is an accountant, she the daughter of a successful businessman. They live in a comfortable middle-class village in Surrey. When the novel opens they are giving a garden party to celebrate their daughter?s baptism. During the party their son Jeremy is knocked down on the road outside when chasing after an escaped rabbit. He survives, but to all intents as a vegetable. Unable to speak, only grunt, incontinent, spoon-fed and propped up each day in front of a television.
The once ideal marriage is troubled by the stress, the pressure caused by Jeremy?s state of health. Mark holds down his job only because the firm for whom he works gets substantial business from his father-in-law. Claire stays at home, looks after her declining son and young daughter and neglects her husband. Mark suggests a holiday on their own. But Claire refuses, because she worries about leaving Jeremy in care. Mark goes to Portugal on his own and meets a young widow with children on the beach. He is tempted to pursue an affair. He considers divorce, but worries about the guilt of leaving Claire with their crippled son.
When her younger sister, Sally, an MP, launches a Private Members? Bill to legalise euthanesia, the Press assumes she is doing it for her sister and besiege Mark and Claire?s home.
All the time Jeremy?s stage of health is in slow decline. But is Jeremy the glue that holds the marriage together, however tenuously? Ann Widdecombe uses the analogy of the dead tree, once the glory of its garden, and now the host for a clematis that once a year covers it in flowers. Jeremy, she says is like the tree, passive; the clematis is the parental love that embraces him.
In the climax to the book, Jeremy?s life reaches a crisis and he dies. What will happen to Mark and Claire?s marriage now? Will they be up to the challenge of rebuilding their marriage without their son?

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: W&N
Published: 13 Apr 2000

ISBN 10: 0297645722
ISBN 13: 9780297645726
Book Overview: Debut novel by high profile Tory MP Michael Cockerell BBC TV profile

Media Reviews
Ambitious * SUNDAY TELEGRAPH *

She has crafted a compelling story about the way a family copes with a catastrophe. The isolation ofthe parents within an apparently loving family is acutely observed

-- Bel Mooney * THE TIMES *
A delight, a very polished read * CATHOLIC HERALD *
An accomplished first novel * TATLER *
Author Bio
Ann Widdecombe is best known as a former Member of Parliament and for her broadcasting and journalism, but she long had ambitions to write novels. She is the author of four novels, and likes to write her novels on long train journeys and in Singapore, when visiting her Chinese nanny.