The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘The Balcony’ is riveting debut fiction

- BY KENDAL WEAVER

“The Balcony” (Little, Brown and Co.), by Jane Delury

A limestone manor, surrounded by fields and forests not far from Paris, is the main setting for “The Balcony,” a subtly crafted and richly rewarding debut book of fiction by Jane Delury.

With a servants’ cottage tucked nearby, the once-grand estate emerges as a central presence in the narrative, looming large in the passions and destinies of a changing cast of characters that own it or visit it over a century.

Delury’s book unfolds in 10 separate stories, each with its own title. While they work as compact, remarkable tales in themselves, they connect through characters and events and the manor and its environs - to create a riveting free-form novel.

This narrative structure stand-alone stories woven around a central figure - is reminiscen­t of “Olive Kitteridge,” Elizabeth Strout’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book of stories built around the title character. It is no stretch to mention Delury and Strout in the same sentence: Delury’s debut book, with wise observatio­ns, intriguing twists and indelibly drawn characters, is filled with reading pleasures.

A possible flaw is Delury’s change of stylistic gears in the final story, “Between.”

It echoes themes of the book’s first, “Au Pair,” with a young married woman finding a lover on the side, but it is told in a stilted framework that may be confusing and jarring to the reader.

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