One house.
One family learning to love again.
Cate Morris and her son, Leo, are homeless, adrift. They’ve packed up the boxes from their London home, said goodbye to friends and colleagues, and now they are on their way to ‘Hatters Museum of the Wide Wide World – to stay just for the summer. Cate doesn’t want to be there, in Richard’s family home without Richard to guide her any more. And she knows for sure that Araminta, the retainer of the collection of dusty objects and stuffed animals, has taken against them. But they have nowhere else to go. They have to make the best of it.
But Richard hasn’t told Cate the truth about his family’s history. And something about the house starts to work its way under her skin.
Can she really walk away, once she knows the truth?
Comment: I got interested in this book because it would feature an interesting setting and reading very superficial comments made it seem as if there would be a hint of romance as well.
Cate and her son Leo need to move out, especially since Cate's job has become redundant. Since her late husband Richard had a family estate in the countryside, including a very particular museum, they drive there on purpose, to spend the summer while Cate looks for a new job, otherwise they would be homeless. However, things aren't that simple and the person in charge of the museum, Araminta, doesn't seem to be very welcoming, at least not to Cate, and the museum isn't doing very well. Still, Cate and Leo need to try to do their best and as they get to know more people and learn more about the place, they start seeing it through different eyes. Will they be able to see past the problems and feel they actually belong to this new and surprising world?
At first, all was going well and the early pages seemed to imply at one of those stories where the characters need to learn something/overcome something and falling in love with a new place is just the thing to give them a new look at life. There are countless books out there with this premise and I tend to enjoy reading about the potential of these life lessons, especially if there is romance included.
However, it soon became obvious to me that this story wasn't that simple or that it would follow the pattern I imagined. The plot begins when Cate and Leo arrive at the estate and get to see the museum, which was devised by her late husband's grandfather, but I confess I struggled to picture certain things in my mind and it took me quite a while - I can't truly tell if this had been made clear earlier or not - to realize that Leo isn't a child as I first thought, for instance. Likely, there are other details that I've missed as well.
The story is narrated by Cate, and for the most part she is a character I sympathize with, more so because she shares, in timely fashion, tidbits about her life and how it had been with all the things she has had to deal with, namely raising her son without her husband, who died. There's more to this situation that what we are aware of at first, and as we get to understand her trials and how this has affected her, I cannot help but to empathize with her and what she had to face. I did like her as a character, but I cannot say I was always eager to read about what she was thinking.
Since we only get her POV, there are some details that feel fuzzy. Still, I was quite eager to see where this would go but I'll have to say that around half way, more or less, my focus started to decrease. It became more and more difficult to remain interested in what was happening. At that point more characters were introduced, including someone who seemed to be the love interest but I was no longer eager to keep reading. I still wanted to know how the story would end and that means I've finished the book but all the details of that final part of the novel didn't seem to make much sense.
The museum with the stuffed animals and quirky things seemed great at first too and I imagined this would be a great setting for good scenes but I'll have to agree with those who felt the vibe was more along the "creepy" line. I also think the connection between the museum, Cate's late husband and her role in self discovery weren't as smoothly conjugated as I think the author could have done. There were times that ti felt some details were just an afterthought and not truly important for the plot.
The romantic element was a let down as well, and led to a very confusing end. Well, several situations made the end seem confusing, but then there's also the issue of the very final page feel as if the story was not complete. Did Cate really find a way to "save" the museum and if so, are her feelings about that as genuine as it seems? I think the end was way too open ended for this feel final to me. I'd have preferred to have more closure on the situations that had been hinted at throughout the novel.











