3.5 Stars
I’ve read all of Valérie Perrin’s previous novels so was anxious to read her latest.
In the fall of 2010, thirty-eight-year-old Agnès Dugain, a film director, receives a phone call informing her that her aunt, Colette Septembre, has died. The problem is that Colette died three years earlier and her body is in the cemetery of Gueugnon in eastern France. When Agnès comes to identify the body, she has no doubt that this is her aunt. Questions arise: whose body is in her grave and why did Colette fake her death?
Colette leaves her niece a series of cassettes. As Agnès listens she learns about her aunt’s life: her early life with her parents; her friendship with Blaise; her hopes for her brother Jean, a musical prodigy; her apprenticeship to an Algerian cobbler; her obsession with football; her secret affair; and a friendship which changed her life. Colette was a modest woman who tended to stay in the background but Agnès realizes how little she knew about the woman with whom she spent every summer. Colette’s life was actually extraordinary with many surprises and secrets. The number of connections she had with so many people is unexpected.
At around 600 pages, this is a lengthy book, but I didn’t find it dragged. The opening catches the reader’s attention immediately with its mention of the mystery surrounding Colette’s death. As the novel continues, the complex web of connections among characters keeps propelling the narrative. The one problem is that there are an improbable number of coincidences so the reader must willingly suspend disbelief. The connections between Jean and Hannah and between Jean and Blanche are especially difficult to accept.
The narrative moves back and forth through time. Sometimes the point of view changes suddenly and this approach can be confusing. Everyone is given a backstory so there is a lot of information. Fortunately, these stories tend to be interesting and, of course, explain motivations so behaviour is more understandable. Certainly without being given Blanche’s background, her actions and those of Colette would be unbelievable.
The book is a love story, a mystery, and multiple family sagas. It touches on so many subjects: domestic abuse, the long-term influence of parent-child relationships, family secrets, the impact of friendships, child sexual abuse, secret loves, and even the Holocaust. Certainly, there are a lot of unhappy childhoods with absent, neglectful, or abusive parents. Fortunately, the ending does offer hope.
Tata is not my favourite of Perrin’s novels, but I still recommend it to those who enjoy complex plots with surprise twists and interesting characters.
See my reviews of Perrin’s other books:
Fresh Water for Flowers: https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2020/11/review-of-fresh-water-for-flowers-by.html
Three: https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2022/06/review-of-three-by-valerie-perrin-new.html
Forgotten on Sunday: https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2024/06/review-of-forgotten-on-sunday-by.html
Note: I received an eARC from the publisher via NetGalley.






