Lynne Truss
Not Much Fun to be Born the Messiah
Kingdom Come
By Bernice Rubens
Hamish Hamilton 224pp £12.95
In an Andrew Davies TV play shown in Christmas week, Jack Shepherd was allowed to give voice to a rather profound insight. His contention was that Tolstoy had been quite wrong about families: when he said, in Anna Karenina, that ‘all happy families are alike, but an unhappy family is unhappy after its own fashion’, he was being merely epigrammatic. In fact, said Shepherd, surely the opposite is true. Every happy family is happy after its own fashion (in having found some idiosyncratic accommodation that will allow the doomed unit to function), while the miserable families are all bloody miserable for precisely identical reasons.
Leaving aside all the psychotherapists in the world, there was one person who knew this fact already: Bernice Rubens. She knows that all our sadness and anger comes from the mum and dad who fuck you up: mothers (fathers) who don’t love enough; fathers (mothers) who set impossible standards; the
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It wasn’t until 1825 that Pepys’s diary became available for the first time. How it was eventually decrypted and published is a story of subterfuge and duplicity.
Kate Loveman tells the tale.
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Was he really the finer artist, asks Tanya Harrod, or is it time Gwen emerged from her brother’s shadow?
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