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Paradise Lodge by Nina Stibbe review – funny, brutal and touching

Written By Unknown on Friday, June 3, 2016 | 4:14 AM

Stibbe’s young heroine Lizzie Vogel comes of age, contending with ‘comfort rounds’ and commodes in an elderly care home

Reading a good book is like coming home, and ultimately home is the main theme of Nina Stibbe’s new novel. In it we revisit her young heroine Lizzie Vogel a few years after we left her at the end of Stibbe’s first novel, the witty and delightful Man at the Helm. As a 10-year-old, Lizzie was looking for a safe space for her mother and siblings; at 15 she is more concerned about the residents and staff of a local care home named Paradise Lodge. Lizzie takes a job there to earn enough money to buy Linco beer shampoo and Maxwell House coffee, becoming an auxiliary nurse whose main duty is helping with the “comfort rounds”.

Books full of older characters have become very popular recently. This isn’t something I can really complain about, and certainly not something I would ever condemn, but they tend to fall into the trap of sentimentality – sweet old ladies and gents with gentle wisdom. The sharp, deadpan descriptions of Lizzie are never saccharine, though, and Stibbe manages to find the right balance, being both funny and touching, brutal and tender. For example, when Lizzie first meets the care home’s male residents her narration heads towards insensitivity, but is saved by her humour and observation, showing us details that restore the characters’ individuality: “They were extremely old – around a hundred, I’d guessed – and it was like being at the aquarium and thinking the amphibians looked like old men (only the other way round). But they were very alive, one of them was reading the Daily Mail and another was fiddling with a transistor radio.”

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