
Love Forms by Claire Adam: A novel of cumulative force
Author
:
Claire Adam
ISBN-13
:
978-0571339549
Publisher
:
Faber & Faber
Guideline Price
:
£16.99
Love Forms is a novel about what we bury and the surprising ways it resurfaces. The first scene takes place in 1980. Sixteen-year-old Dawn Bishop, heavily pregnant, boards a boat from her home in Trinidad to a convent in Venezuela. There, she will give birth and give up the child for adoption. Her white, upper-class family has handled the logistics and made a pact: when she comes back, all of this will be forgotten.
But the body remembers. So does the mind, even when it tries not to. The novel, narrated by an older Dawn (divorced, living in England, mother to two grown sons), doesn't follow a straight line. It moves by echo and examination, circling back through memories that are sometimes pivotal, sometimes seemingly incidental. Yet it never drifts. Each new memory has a weight; it shifts the balance of the narrative, reconfiguring the relationship between the events that precede it. This isn't a confession but a reassembly, a story that evolves as the narrator tries to sort through it in her mind.
[
Claire Adam on St Patrick's Day in Trinidad: 'We'd come back from school to find all the Irish ladies boozed up and laughing their heads off'
]
The catalyst arrives in the form of a message from a stranger claiming to be Dawn's lost daughter. After years of searching through online forums and being met with false leads, this may finally be the connection she has been seeking. But this is not a novel about reunion. It's about what happens when realisation comes too late.
Dawn's voice is the novel's anchor: wise, perceptive, and eminently likable. She is a well-drawn portrait of the average middle-aged mother, who has seen far more than she lets on, and carries her experience lightly. ''Girl,' I said. 'It's not easy!' I meant it in the way only Trinidadians would understand, the marvelling at how strange the world was, how incomprehensible.' Her sturdiness, laced with exasperated humour, prevents the subject from becoming unbearably leaden.
READ MORE
Love Forms is a novel of cumulative force. There's no catharsis or revelation, just the quiet pressure of the past pushing against the present. As the title suggests, it's an examination of two intertwined meanings: the varied forms love takes, and the complex, often strange process by which love itself forms within us. Claire Adam brings a refreshing seriousness and sincerity to these mysteries.
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Irish Times
a day ago
- Irish Times
The best books for summer 2025: our critics' top picks
Claire Adam A House for Miss Pauline by Diana McCaulay. Fast approaching her 100th birthday, the indomitable Miss Pauline is anxious to unburden herself of certain secrets before she dies. If the Jamaican dialect is difficult, as it was for me, try reading parts out loud until you get the hang of it. The Borrowed Hills by Scott Preston. I read this as a judge for the Sunday Times Young Writer Award. (It was shortlisted.) It's a sort of cowboy western in Cumbria, set during the foot-and-mouth crisis. Gritty and bloody, but also beautiful and moving, and an absolute page-turner. I loved it. Claire Adam's latest novel is Love Forms (Faber) Oliver Farry Omar El Akkad's One Day Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This is the standout book on the war in Gaza. Part-memoir, part-despairing jeremiad, it will likely be read and studied long after the present conflict and has an inspired title that has already entered the vernacular. Tim MacGabhann's The Black Pool is an often harrowing but stylish account of the author's addiction and recovery that is brilliantly atmospheric, imbued with the heat and dust of Mexico, where much of it takes place. Olga Tokarczuk's The Empusium: A Health Resort Horror Story continues her intertextual excavation of Central European history with this acerbic feminist riposte to The Magic Mountain. Oliver Farry is a foreign correspondent and book reviewer READ MORE Ferdia Lennon The announcement of a new Andrew Miller novel is always a cause for celebration, and The Land in Winter really is a wonder. Strikingly well observed, Miller's evocation of the coldest British winter on record is the perfect summer read by way of contrast. We Pretty Pieces of Flesh by Colwill Brown is a blistering coming-of-age tale about three best friends, Shaz, Rach and Kel, growing up in Doncaster in the noughties. Utterly immersive, hilarious, and very moving. Read it. Closer to home, Fun and Games by John Patrick McHugh is a brilliant and bittersweet ode to young love, friendship and GAA set over a single summer. Ferdia Lennon's debut novel is Glorious Exploits (Penguin) Éilís Ní Dhuibhne Andrew Meehan's Best Friends, a lively love story about two septuagenarians, is 'perfect summer reading' according to its Irish Times reviewer (me). It's just right for the plane or train – especially if you've got the travel pass. Patrick Holloway's debut, The Language of Remembering, is a refreshing take on the trope of the single mother in the dark 1970s, which ultimately celebrates love. One of the most entertaining novels as Gaeilge I've reviewed in ages, Darach Ó Scolaí's Bódlaer, is a sparkling, lighthearted satire on the poetry scene in Gaelic Ireland. Brilliant. Éilís Ní Dhuibhne's latest book is Selected Stories (Blackstaff) John Boyne Róisín Lanigan's I Want to Go Home But I'm Already There has stayed with me since I read it in January. An unsettling debut about a couple renting a London flat, the novel develops a Rosemary's Baby vibe when central character Áine finds her sense of reality being undermined. A chapter featuring a foster dog is extraordinary. Sameer Pandya's Our Beautiful Boys delves into the aftermath of a school bully being viciously assaulted and the lengths the parents of his assaulters will go to in order to keep them out of jail. A literary page-turner with a nice twist at the end. John Boyne's latest novel is Air (Doubleday) [ 'I don't write a lot of personal stuff': author Róisín Lanigan on being married, divorced and surviving cancer before her 30s Opens in new window ] Sarah Moss Assuming that by 'summer reading' we mean 'life changing reading' as well as 'amusing reading', I suggest Adrienne Maree Brown's Pleasure Activism, which will invite you to think differently, more permissively, about the practice and meaning of enjoyment. It's an anthology, so between dips into it you could read Samantha Ellis's Chopping Onions on my Heart, which is also about how to be intelligently happy when there are reasons for sorrow. For absorbing fiction, Sarah Hall's new book Helm is predictably superb. Sarah Moss's latest novel is Ripeness (Picador) Claire Hennessy Campus shenanigans of decades past are skilfully evoked in two very different but equally compulsive titles: Anna Carey's Our Song , a swoony but grounded second-chance romance, and Lisa Harding's deliciously dark psychological mystery The Wildelings. Two impressive debuts: Claire Gleeson's Show Me Where It Hurts and Roisin O'Donnell's Nesting tackle impossibly painful family situations with care and nuance. Poetry lovers might want to dip into the thought-provoking new collections from Alice Kinsella (The Ethics of Cats) and Kimberly Campanello (An Interesting Detail). YA-wise , Caroline O'Donoghue's addictive romantasy Skipshock and Grainne O'Brien's delicate verse novel Solo are this summer's must-reads. Claire Hennessy's latest book is In the Movie of Her Life (Doire Press) [ Good books: The 20 best holiday reads this summer Opens in new window ] Joseph O'Connor I'd recommend The Kings Head, an excellent debut novel from Kelly Frost set in the Teddy Girl subculture of postwar England, a fascinating movement documented by the photography of Ken Russell. Frost's vivid, supple, filmic prose is a pleasure; she's a writer to watch. Sharon Guard's Assembling Ailish, June O'Sullivan's The Lighthouse Keeper's Wife and Grainne O'Brien's Young Adult novel in verse Solo, are fine achievements, as is Noelle Lynskey's debut collection of poems, Featherweight. Martin Dyar's The Meek is an exceptional second collection from a poet who is also a gifted storyteller. Full of precision, acute observation and reverent encounters with the natural world, it's a book I'll come back to many times. Joseph O'Connor's latest novel is The Ghosts of Rome (Harvill Secker) Kevin Power The best Irish book I've read so far this year is Every One Still Here by Liadan Ní Chuin , published by Stinging Fly Press. It's a collection of long stories, mostly set in contemporary Derry, mostly about young people, partly about the legacies of the Troubles and wholly about trauma. But the seriousness of Ni Chuinn's stories is inseparable from their superlatively rich, readable, perceptive, highly original prose. I also wholeheartedly recommend Lamorna Ash's Don't Forget, We're Here Forever (Bloomsbury), a brilliant and deeply personal book about the various meanings of Christianity in the contemporary UK. Kevin Power's latest novel is White City (Scribner UK) Rónán Hession Top of my summer reading list is The Gorgeous Inertia of the Earth by my favourite contemporary Irish writer, Adrian Duncan. I'm looking forward to Saltburn by Drew Gummerson and Crapalachia by Scott McClanahan, the funniest writers around. My favourite books this year were On the Calculation of Volume, Volumes I and II, by Solvej Balle, translated by Barbara J Haveland – she also translated the sublime Encircling trilogy by Karl Frode Tiller, which has obsessed me. I heartily recommend The Book of All Loves by Augustín Fernández Mallo, translated by Thomas Bunstead, and What a Time to be Alive by Jenny Mustard. Rónán Hession's latest novel is Ghost Mountain (Bluemoose) John Self I loved Michael Amherst's novel The Boyhood of Cain , a debut with its voice fully formed, about a boy growing up in a school where his father is the headmaster. It's sad, funny, rigorous, elegant and very Coetzeean. Irish-Trinidadian writer Amanda Smyth has written a glorious autobiographical novel, Look at You, which is a string of intensely vivid scenes from adolescence and young adulthood: love, sex, family drama, the lot. And Hassan Blasim's Sololand is three novellas around and about postwar Iraq, which are far more blackly funny than they have any right to be. He's a star. John Self is a critic Ruby Eastwood The Uncollected Stories of Mavis Gallant are sharp and deadpan, marked by moments of striking insight. This newly gathered volume spans five decades of her work: tales of spiritually exiled characters drifting through shabby boarding houses and inhospitable cities, struggling with fraught, often impossible relationships. Her prose is composed yet surges in unexpected places. The strongest pieces feel loosely assembled: landscape and mannerisms rendered with precise clarity but never quite falling into the recognisable shape of a story. 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Joseph Dunne, Ireland's leading educational philosopher, has written What's the Good of Education?, a challenging and compelling exploration of how education can contribute to a flourishing democracy provided that our classrooms are not hijacked by tech oligarchs and bean counters. Robert Macfarlane's Is a River Alive? is another urgently persuasive work from the author of Landmarks and Underworld. A master storyteller, Macfarlane uses richly poetic and precise prose to make a timely plea for the rescue of our rivers from callous neglect and wanton destruction. Michael Cronin is professor of French at Trinity College Dublin Sarah Gilmartin In Greece earlier this month, I disturbed the peace of other sunbathers with intermittent shrieking laughter. The culprits? Miranda July's All Fours and Caroline O'Donoghue's The Rachel Incident . Both are brilliantly observed, funny, provocative, and my favourite kind of beach read: deceptively easy. 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It is an extraordinary mediation on his family story, blending memoir, history and fiction, covering his native Tasmania, nuclear physics and the atomic bomb, writers behaving badly, the natural environment, and his father's prisoner of war experience in Japan. Big questions are thread through the book, such as 'why do we do what we do to each other?', how we go on, and the meaning of love and forgiveness. Each time he seems headed in the direction of answers, he underlines the emptiness of meaning. This is a melancholic, direct, lyrical and beautiful book. Diarmaid Ferriter is professor of modern Irish history at UCD


Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Love Forms by Claire Adam: A novel of cumulative force
Love Forms Author : Claire Adam ISBN-13 : 978-0571339549 Publisher : Faber & Faber Guideline Price : £16.99 Love Forms is a novel about what we bury and the surprising ways it resurfaces. The first scene takes place in 1980. Sixteen-year-old Dawn Bishop, heavily pregnant, boards a boat from her home in Trinidad to a convent in Venezuela. There, she will give birth and give up the child for adoption. Her white, upper-class family has handled the logistics and made a pact: when she comes back, all of this will be forgotten. But the body remembers. So does the mind, even when it tries not to. The novel, narrated by an older Dawn (divorced, living in England, mother to two grown sons), doesn't follow a straight line. It moves by echo and examination, circling back through memories that are sometimes pivotal, sometimes seemingly incidental. Yet it never drifts. Each new memory has a weight; it shifts the balance of the narrative, reconfiguring the relationship between the events that precede it. This isn't a confession but a reassembly, a story that evolves as the narrator tries to sort through it in her mind. [ Claire Adam on St Patrick's Day in Trinidad: 'We'd come back from school to find all the Irish ladies boozed up and laughing their heads off' ] The catalyst arrives in the form of a message from a stranger claiming to be Dawn's lost daughter. After years of searching through online forums and being met with false leads, this may finally be the connection she has been seeking. But this is not a novel about reunion. It's about what happens when realisation comes too late. Dawn's voice is the novel's anchor: wise, perceptive, and eminently likable. She is a well-drawn portrait of the average middle-aged mother, who has seen far more than she lets on, and carries her experience lightly. ''Girl,' I said. 'It's not easy!' I meant it in the way only Trinidadians would understand, the marvelling at how strange the world was, how incomprehensible.' Her sturdiness, laced with exasperated humour, prevents the subject from becoming unbearably leaden. READ MORE Love Forms is a novel of cumulative force. There's no catharsis or revelation, just the quiet pressure of the past pushing against the present. As the title suggests, it's an examination of two intertwined meanings: the varied forms love takes, and the complex, often strange process by which love itself forms within us. Claire Adam brings a refreshing seriousness and sincerity to these mysteries.


The Irish Sun
2 days ago
- The Irish Sun
Lionesses star Leah Williamson poses in new Calvin Klein collection ahead of Euro clash with France
ENGLAND footballer Leah Williamson gets extra support ahead of tomorrow's Euro clash with France. 4 England captain Lead Williamson wore a sports bra and pants as part of Calvin Klein's new collection Credit: Calvin Klein/Zachariah Mahrouche 4 Ace Leah stunned ahead of tomorrow's Euro clash with France in this sports bra Credit: Calvin Klein/Zachariah Mahrouche Defending champions Leah this week opened up on England's secret weapon for the tournament. The defender believes Michelle Agyemang will give England a different attacking edge after her stunning debut. Williamson says she "could only dream of having" Agyemang's athleticism after going toe-to-toe with the striker during training. READ MORE ON ENGLAND He chatted with coach Most read in Football The Prince is throwing his support behind the national women's team — just as in 2022 when he was at Wembley to watch them win the title. Wills will attend at least one group game, maybe more depending on his royal commitments. Arsenal ace Leah Williamson reacts to being appointed England Captain for the EUROS 4 The defender shows off the CK waistband in double denim Credit: Calvin Klein/Zachariah Mahrouche 4 Defending champions England begin their Euro 2025 Group D at 8pm, pictured Leah on the pitch during England's demolition of Jamaica Credit: Alamy