Share for friends:

Read Under Gemini (2010)

Under Gemini (2010)

Online Book

Genre
Rating
3.71 of 5 Votes: 3
Your rating
ISBN
0006177980 (ISBN13: 9780006177982)
Language
English
Publisher
harpercollins publishers

Under Gemini (2010) - Plot & Excerpts

Whenever I need a pick-me-up or just want to curl up under a blanket and forget about my problems for a while, I turn to Rosamunde Pilcher. Her books are not exactly what you’d call high literature (I suppose they belong to the women’s fiction category), but they always give me that warm, fuzzy feeling inside. Under Gemini is no exception.Flora and Rose are twins who were separated at birth – their parents took one each and never told them about it. Twenty-two years later they suddenly find themselves face to face at a restaurant in London. Rose takes off for Greece the next day, but offers Flora her flat for the weekend. Then Antony, Rose’s ex-fiancé, shows up at the door, wanting Rose to come with him home to Scotland. His grandmother Tuppy is ill, and wants so badly to see her grandson and the woman he’s going to marry – Antony hasn’t gotten around to telling her about him and Rose splitting up, and now, thinking Tuppy is going to die, he hasn’t the heart to tell her the truth. So he elicits Flora to come with him and pretend to be her twin sister for the weekend. But once in Scotland, Flora begins to realise Rose may not have been the innocent girl she thought she was…Once you accept the incredible coincidence of two twin sisters separated at birth accidentally bumping into each other at a London restaurant (which only took me about a second – it’s not impossible, just unlikely), you can look forward to a touching story of old secrets, new lies and of course love. I once attended a lecture on writing screenplays, and the lecturer gave us this rule: ”Give the audience what they want, but do it in a way they don’t expect.” I think this is one of Mrs. Pilcher’s strengths; a happy ending comes as no surprise, but you don’t know how you will reach the end until you’re (nearly) there.Under Gemini is, like many of Mrs. Pilcher’s books, set mostly in Scotland. She paints a beautiful picture of the country and its lochs, mountains and beaches. Her descriptions are so vivid, I could almost smell the salty air and hear the lapping of the waves. Maybe it’s because I live in a small town by the sea myself, but the little fishing town of Tarbole feels very real to me.The dialogue feels a little stiff sometimes, especially in the voice of young Flora (I don’t think “ghastly” is a much-used word by twenty-somethings, even in 1976 when the book was written). It fits the older characters perfectly, though, and 7-year-old Jason has a very credible childish way of speaking.Speaking of characters, they are the reason I love Mrs. Pilcher’s books so much. There’s not a lot of action, so the story is driven forward by the characters and the relationships between them. Flora is a sweet, level-headed young woman who’s at a crossroads in her life – she’s just arrived back in London after staying at home with her father for the past year, and now she has to find a job and a flat and start a new life. She has moral qualms about pretending to be someone else, but is so intrigued by her newfound sister that she can’t resist trying to be her. It’s interesting how Rose only appears on a few pages, yet she’s one of the characters we get to know the most simply through hearing the other characters talking about her. Tuppy is a charming old lady who’s been running the big household of Fernrigg all of her life, but is now faced with old age and not being able to do everything herself anymore. Isobel is the worried daughter fussing over her mother, and Antony is the successful businessman full of good intentions, but who acts before he thinks. Then there’s Hugh Kyle, the village doctor, whom everyone seems to like but who doesn’t seem to like Flora – or Rose.I found myself wanting to spend time with these characters. I want to be friends with Flora and listen to Tuppy’s stories. I want to live in a big old house like Fernrigg and help Isobel in the garden and walk the dogs at the beach. And most of all I want to attend a real highland dance with reels and food and flower arrangements.Ultimately Under Gemini is about the search for your true identity. It is a perfect book to read outside in the summer sunshine, to wind down with at the end of a long day or when you just need the literary equivalent of a hug.

This book was a sleeper. I read the first half in a fog while reading two other slightly less than special books. This book was the last to be finished. The first half was read while in the car during lunch hour. The second half was read over the weekend at home after I'd finished the other two. As I was reading the first half I was so reminded of "Parent Trap". I just had deja vue about what was going on with the twins, Flora & Rose, and felt I had heard it and read it all before. I was just annoyed that Flora had agreed to such a stupid week with Tuppy. Even the name "Tuppy" annoyed me. I usually love Pilcher's books and want to immediately move to the beach. Actually I usually want to do that whether reading her books or not.....well anyway....while reading the second half I started to really like what was going on and couldn't put the book down till I finished it. I fell in love with Hugh--who wouldn't? I wanted to go to his house and also linger in Tuppy's house at the party. Pilcher just has a way of staging. She appeals to the homemaker in me. I am ready most of the time to sell my house and move to the beach. Although I give this book a 4.5, I must round it to a 5.

What do You think about Under Gemini (2010)?

Rosamunde Pilcher is my favourite "popular" writer. She manages to be cosy and astute at the same time. Her small novels are all very readable and I believe were published by St Martins to grab some of the Mills & Boon market. This one is I think the best of these and it would make a very enjoyable film if the original setting of the 1970s was kept.Here's a perfect example why I love Pilcher's writing:"At once the small curled-up ball of fur at the end of Tuppy's bed resolved itself into an elderly Yorkshire terrier, rearing up from the eiderdown like a cobra and growling ferociously with a great show of teeth sadly depleted by age."A delight!
—Debbie Robson

Another good read from Rosamunde Pilcher. Just as she does in the other books, she explains people and the things they do with so much detail that you feel like you're a fly on the wall watching their lives. (My life dream!) Don't let the premiss, that may be a tad cliche', deter you from reading this book. Once again, Rosamunde helped me fall in love with her characters and I wished the book were longer. Can't wait to read another one of her books. Shell Seekers is still my favorite, but this was enjoyable and easy.
—Kelly

I really enjoyed this book, and will look for more by Pilcher in the future. I thought the story would revolve around the relationship between Rose and Flora, identical twins seperated at birth. In the end I was glad it did not. Pilcher was able to create strong, human characters whom I developed a variety of opinions about. Even the absent character of Rose became familiar, if not particularly liked by me. I originally thought Antony was selfish asking Flora to participate in his deception. In the end I saw two people who were doing what they thought was best for someone they thought was dieing. If Isobel had not misled them I feel these two people would never do such a thing. (See Pilcher was great, it is as if I actually know these two people!) Lucky for me the story did have a happy and romantic ending, because that is was I was looking for.
—Nicola

Write Review

(Review will shown on site after approval)

Read books by author Rosamunde Pilcher

Read books in category Fiction