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Book review: Reparation

Madeleine Kingsley enjoys a debut about a mother -daughter replationship

March 13, 2019 16:05
Gaby Koppel
2 min read

Reparation By Gaby Koppel
Honno, £8.99

‘It sounds like a script by Roman Polanski,” says TV crime journalist Elizabeth of her life. Aranca, her mother (mutti) an elderly Hungarian-born alcoholic and nicotine addict has just announced an indefinite stay in her daughter’s London flat. “Let’s just hope,” Elizabeth adds drily, “neither of us meets a sticky end by way of the rear balcony.”

Elizabeth’s mutti should by rights be at home in Wales with her long-suffering husband. But the elderly pair have hit the financial buffers and Aranca is belatedly bent on claiming war compensation from the Hungarian government to prop up their precarious finances.

In this debut novel, Gaby Koppel could have settled for a darkly comic study of a Jewish mother’s relationship with a singleton she has gripped in “a psychological half-nelson”. The year is 1997 and Aranca seems a troublesome Magyar Maenad scented with Madame Rochas. She’s just been thrown, drunk, off the flight to Ibiza where she was heading to sell the holiday home.