I haven’t taken part in the Read Christie challenge for the last two months and wanted to join in with the May read. The book of the month, Cards on the Table, is one that I’ve read quite recently, though, and I’ve also read all of the other alternative suggestions – so instead I decided to read a book I had been considering for 1952 Club in April but didn’t get to as I ran out of time. A Daughter’s a Daughter, published in 1952 (obviously), is one of six novels that appeared under the name Mary Westmacott, Christie’s pseudonym for her books that weren’t mysteries or thrillers. It’s the third Westmacott I’ve read (the others being Unfinished Portrait and Giant’s Bread) and it’s my favourite so far.
The novel opens with Ann Prentice saying goodbye to her nineteen-year-old daughter, Sarah, who is going on a skiing trip to Switzerland. Ann, a widow in her early forties, is very close to her daughter and isn’t looking forward to spending three whole weeks without her. However, while Sarah is away, Ann meets Richard Cauldfield at a party and falls in love. Richard has spent many years in Burma since the death of his wife and has only recently returned to England. On the surface he seems a pompous man, but as Ann gets to know him she sees that he is good and kind – and just days after meeting him, she agrees to marry him. The only problem is, Sarah is due back from Switzerland soon and Ann is worried about how she’ll take the news.
Sarah takes it very badly: she dislikes Richard on sight and decides that her mother can’t be allowed to marry him. Richard tries to befriend Sarah, but has no idea how to speak to a teenage girl and gets everything badly wrong. Meanwhile, Sarah deliberately tries to provoke him and cause arguments, until the atmosphere in the household becomes unbearable. Ann is caught in the middle – she loves Richard and is sure she will be happy with him, but Sarah is her only child and she loves her too. Eventually, she is forced to choose between them and makes a decision she’ll regret for the rest of her life.
I loved this book, but at the same time I found it uncomfortable to read. Sarah is infuriatingly selfish and spiteful, so much so that even later in the book when she ends up desperately unhappy, I couldn’t find much sympathy for her. My heart broke for Ann when she had to make her difficult choice, but after a while she also began to annoy me and I felt that she didn’t handle the situation as well as she could have done. Both Ann and Sarah feel very human, though, and it’s a testament to Christie’s writing that her characters were able to evoke strong emotions in me. Fortunately, there are also some characters I liked, such as Sarah’s boyfriend, Gerry Lloyd, and Ann’s loyal but outspoken housekeeper, Edith. My favourite, though, is Dame Laura Whitstable, Ann’s friend and Sarah’s godmother. A woman in her sixties, Laura has more experience of life than the two younger women and tries her best to pass on her wisdom and knowledge to them without actually giving ‘advice’ or telling them what to do.
I’ve seen the Westmacott books described as romances, but this one is much more of a psychological novel, exploring the relationship between mother and daughter and what it really means to sacrifice your own happiness for someone you love. I found it surprisingly gripping and finished it in two days. I’m now looking forward to reading the other three Westmacotts.
I’m glad you found this so good because the only MW title I’ve read is Unfinished Portrait which I didn’t really enjoy and had a mind to just forget the others, but I won’t!
Unfinished Portrait was my least favourite of the three I’ve read, so it’s probably worth trying another one to see what you think.
If you liked this for it’s psychological approach you might appreciate Absent in the Spring (the only Westmacott I’ve read so far) which is similarly insightful but not in the least romantic – in fact you could almost say it’s anti-romantic, as with this one!
Absent in the Spring does sound appealing and I’m pleased to hear it’s another psychological, anti-romantic novel like this one! I’ll look forward to reading it.
I loved the MW covers when I was a girl (partly because my best friend’s last name was also Westmacott). But they also seemed so romantic and mysterious on the shelves of the “adult” side of the library.
I don’t think I’ve ever known anyone called Westmacott. It’s a nice name. And yes, the adult section of the library always looked so exciting, didn’t it?
I haven’t read any of the books Christie wrote under the name Mary Westmacott. I’m still trying to work my way through her mysteries. ;D Sarah does sound like a very selfish daughter.
I still have lots of the mysteries to work through too! Yes, Sarah really annoyed me. She never thought about her mother’s happiness at all.
I’ll have to look for this one.
It’s a good one.
I missed the charm of Agatha Christie’s crime writing-style when I read this. The characters were so frustrating for all of the reasons you’ve said, and they all ended up living sad lives as a result.
I can see why she used a different name for these books, because they do have a very different feel from her crime novels and won’t necessarily appeal to the same readers.