The Star Malaysia - Star2

Simple outside, rich inside

- Review by CYNTHIA DICKISON

The Confession Club

Author: elizabeth Berg Publisher: Penguin random House, mystery

IT all started innocently as the Third Sunday Supper Club, a companiona­ble evening that evolved into a confidence-sharing, soulbaring session.

Now, none of these confession­s is too shocking – no murder, no infidelity. Lacking true scandal, the members live by the practical motto “The truth is always interestin­g”, and you’ll nod along with that sentiment as Gretchen admits her wish to divorce her children or Dodie reveals that she’s dating an exhibition­ist.

But the Confession Club only forms the framework of this tale, serving as provocateu­r, comic relief, affirming Greek chorus.

The real story is Iris Winter’s. Flounderin­g and pushing 50, Iris has found in the town of Mason a respite from the big city and a bad marriage. Hardly able to boil water when she arrived, she’s built a thriving baking-class business from scratch. She feels safe, settled.

But life cooks up a surprise.

His name is John, and a handsomer, handier, more poetic drifter you’ll never meet. Moments after their first encounter – in a true middle-age meet-cute – “Iris decides something. She is going to iron her white cotton dress with lace at the yoke . ... She is going to buy a red bicycle and paint white polka dots on it. She is going to affix a basket onto the handlebars, and fill it every day with incidental offerings, which abound. She is going to unearth her one slim volume of Yeats.” The air is suddenly brighter and softer. Courtship with a homeless man who suffers from Vietnam-spawned PTSD isn’t all poetry, of course. And you can bet the Confession Clubbers (whose presence, to be honest, sometimes feels intrusive) have their say about it when they warily welcome Iris and Maddy into their fold.

Yes, Maddy, the through-line of Berg’s Mason series who graduated from surly, vulnerable teen in The Story Of Arthur Truluv

(2017) to wise young mother in Night Of

Miracles (2018) is back under Iris’ roof. May future stories follow her into her dotage.

You needn’t have read the previous Mason instalment­s to savour The Confession Club, although your appreciati­on of the warm world Berg has created will deepen. Her language is gentle, her stories complex: simple outside and rich inside, like a pound cake from Iris’ kitchen. – Star Tribune/tribune News Service

 ?? Photo: CHRIS POPIO ??
Photo: CHRIS POPIO
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