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The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot: The new and unforgettable Richard & Judy Book Club pick

The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot: The new and unforgettable Richard & Judy Book Club pick

byMarianne Cronin
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Snapdragon
TOP 50 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 starsLovely
Reviewed in Australia on 30 August 2021
Seventeen yo Lenni meets 83 yo Margot in a Glasgow hospital. They both have something terminal going on, though Lenni’s illness is never specified. With Margot it’s her heart. Despite being a quirky, interesting person, Lenni is lonely. She’s told her father not to visit (he’s lost in grief) and her mother has gone back to Sweden. So the friendship she develops with Margot and the kindly Father Arthur from the hospital chapel, and the interactions with cheerful Paul the porter and New Nurse with the cherry red hair mean a lot. Lenni and Margot embark on a project to make 100 paintings to celebrate moments in their combined 100 years of life. They tell each other stories from their lives - more so Margot, who has more to tell. Like any life, it’s had its vicissitudes. The paths of ordinary life are rarely straight. This is such a charming and heartfelt story that it’s not surprising that it’s been bought by a Hollywood studio. Let’s hope they don’t make it an American film (they probably will). It’s told with a light, unsentimental touch and Marianne Cronin is to be congratulated for conveying to us the depths of these two protagonists with an effortless-seeming wisdom that never belabours its points, leaving much unsaid.
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PL
3.0 out of 5 starsA bit of a disappointment
Reviewed in Australia on 23 July 2021
I began Lenni and Margot with high hopes, but felt disappointed with the book half way through. The story was really about Margot, rather than Lenni and her illness, which is how the book began. I think the plot lacked strength, and both the plot and the characters lacked credibility.
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From Australia

Snapdragon
TOP 50 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 stars Lovely
Reviewed in Australia on 30 August 2021
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Seventeen yo Lenni meets 83 yo Margot in a Glasgow hospital. They both have something terminal going on, though Lenni’s illness is never specified. With Margot it’s her heart. Despite being a quirky, interesting person, Lenni is lonely. She’s told her father not to visit (he’s lost in grief) and her mother has gone back to Sweden. So the friendship she develops with Margot and the kindly Father Arthur from the hospital chapel, and the interactions with cheerful Paul the porter and New Nurse with the cherry red hair mean a lot. Lenni and Margot embark on a project to make 100 paintings to celebrate moments in their combined 100 years of life. They tell each other stories from their lives - more so Margot, who has more to tell. Like any life, it’s had its vicissitudes. The paths of ordinary life are rarely straight. This is such a charming and heartfelt story that it’s not surprising that it’s been bought by a Hollywood studio. Let’s hope they don’t make it an American film (they probably will). It’s told with a light, unsentimental touch and Marianne Cronin is to be congratulated for conveying to us the depths of these two protagonists with an effortless-seeming wisdom that never belabours its points, leaving much unsaid.
One person found this helpful
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kerry Boston
4.0 out of 5 stars It’s no surprise why this book is getting rave reviews
Reviewed in Australia on 29 August 2021
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A touching set of tales told through art and the experiences of two unique characters facing death threatening illnesses. It will make you laugh, cry and question everything you THINK some of the dying may be feeling. It reaches into you and tugs at your heart in a way that leaves you forever changed.
Hard to put down you will fall in love with all the characters, and only wish they could go on forever. Love has many forms and this book explores many of them. I found myself having the re-read paragraphs to get their deeper meaning or insinuation. My advice is to read slowly and take it in.
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Shez Fordham
5.0 out of 5 stars beautifully written
Reviewed in Australia on 24 May 2022
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This novel is both heartfelt and poignant exploring all the meaningful and mundane moments of life while drawing you into the very different worlds of Lenni and Margot. Cronin ties all the threads together beautifully and her use of language sweeps you away into other times and places. Well worth the read.
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laurel
5.0 out of 5 stars amazing story
Reviewed in Australia on 21 May 2022
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This book brought laughter and tears and was a wonderful story of what women can mean to each other and the depth of those feelings over the years. The years between the women can be traversed through love and friendship. Powerful story and so worth the read.
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PL
3.0 out of 5 stars A bit of a disappointment
Reviewed in Australia on 23 July 2021
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I began Lenni and Margot with high hopes, but felt disappointed with the book half way through. The story was really about Margot, rather than Lenni and her illness, which is how the book began. I think the plot lacked strength, and both the plot and the characters lacked credibility.
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From other countries

Charismatic Critic
5.0 out of 5 stars This is Marianne Cronin’s debut novel and what a debut it is!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 8 March 2021
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Wow! This is one of my favourite books and one which I will be recommending to many of my friends for years to come!

The story begins by comparing terminal illness to an airport terminal, something I thought was very cleverly done and is carried forward to the end of the book making for a very well rounded story.

The main characters Lenni and Margot are, in many ways, an unlikely pairing but their friendship blossoms and together they share stories of their combined 100 years of life. I relished the stories of Margot, she was full of surprises and it was clear that she had lived a very full life, although not without heartache and pain.

Lenni also has a very special relationship with Father Arthur whom she visits on a regular basis. Their conversations made me laugh out loud and highlighted Lenni’s quick wit and sense of humour.

Although the plot is built around death, it focuses so much on life. There is no emphasis on the illnesses that either of these woman have, there is no unnecessary details shared about their suffering. Instead, this part is very much skimmed over to make way for moments of happiness and the joy they bring to one another’s final chapter.

If you only read one book this year, make it this one. It is such a beautiful looking book to own and one which I chose to buy in hardback because it will look amazing on my book shelf.

The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot is an incredible debut novel from Marianne Cronin, an author who is going to go far and I look forward to joining her on her journey.
28 people found this helpful
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Nicola
5.0 out of 5 stars Perfection!!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 September 2021
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"We can’t know why you are dying in the same way we can’t know why we are living. Living and dying are complete mysteries, and you can’t know either until you have done both."

WOW!!!!

Having read this book I now need to reassess my previous 5 ⭐️ reads. This book is up there, in the top 3 of the best books I have ever read!!!!! I have so much to say about it, but I’m struggling to do it the justice it deserves. Here goes….

This book tells the story of Lenni a 17 year old who has a terminal illness. Although fighting this illness Lenni is alive and wants to live. She refuses with all her strength to let this illness take her life. She sees herself as the person she should be, not who she now is. Lenni is wise beyond her years. She is a beautiful character who is well liked by everyone that she meets, in walks Margot.

Margot is an 83 year old within the same hospital as Lenni and she is suffering with heart problems for which she requires more surgery.

They become unlikely friends at an art class set up for the patients within the hospital.

This book is absolute perfection. It tells the story so beautifully of two unlikely friends and how they bond over a joint project dreamt up by Lenni. We hear about the lives of both, the happiness and sadness leading up to them being in hospital. There is a lot of the story that is of Margot’s life, not surprising really as she has a lot more to tell as she is much older.

I laughed out loud several times during the book. However as the book went on the sadness started to hang over me. This book is a complete celebration of life and love and to be honest it makes you think about the impressions you leave on your own friends and family. This book is thought provoking on another level. The writing is beautiful, the characters are all so well developed. I cannot believe that this is Cronin’s debut novel!!

If you were wanting to choose a book that will leave a lasting impression on you, then don’t delay in reading this, you won’t be disappointed, sad definitely but not disappointed.
15 people found this helpful
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Audrey Haylins
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars Vibrates with wisdom, wit and grace
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 December 2021
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I love a tale about unlikely friendships, but I don’t recall ever reading anything quite as affecting as this emotionally charged story about teenager Lenni and octogenarian Margot.

At 17 and 83 respectively (a combined lifetime of 100 years), they should have little in common. They were born into different worlds, different eras. Margot has lived a long and rich life, while Lenni’s is coming to an end before it’s barely begun. It’s a heartbreaking foundation for a friendship kindled on a palliative care ward.

In many ways, this should be a dark, disturbing read. And, yes, it does have its darker moments. Paradoxically, though, the takeaway is a celebration of life rather than the tragedy of a young girl’s death.

Quite how Marianne Cronin pulls off this astonishing feat, I’m not sure.

Much, of course, is down to the two main protagonists. Lenni: feisty, irreverent, brave, and dying; an old head on frail, young shoulders. Margot: a survivor with a lifetime of regrets and a wicked sense of humor. The two are kindred spirits; drawn to each other like moths to a flame.

Through their friendship and the hours spent on their joint hospital art project, Margot gets to relive and reassess her life, while Lenni gets to vicariously live a life, an experience she’ll never own. The symbiosis is simple but achingly beautiful.

The layers to this novel, Cronin’s debut, are so richly textured, it’s impossible to unpick them. They vibrate with wisdom, wit and grace. They pluck at your heartstrings. And they cling to your consciousness long after you turn the final page.

A triumph of a debut and one of my top five reads of 2021. I can’t wait to read Cronin’s next masterpiece.

Thanks for reading my review. I hope you found it helpful. You can find more candid book reviews on my Amazon profile page.
21 people found this helpful
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Nicmac
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful and moving.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 March 2021
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Just lovely. Emotional but not depressing tale of a terminally ill 17 year old who meets an 83 year old woman in the hospital and forms an art club with her which celebrates the 100 years they have lived. Add in a friendship with a hospital vicar and a helpful nurse and this book explores friendships and the need to live your life to the max every single day. I loved it, despite the ugly crying!
12 people found this helpful
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Jay Ray
3.0 out of 5 stars An original idea
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 December 2021
Verified Purchase
This is an interesting book, featuring two very different people who become friends in an unusual hospital. The main characters and their "supporting cast " are well written and we become absorbed into their stories.
My only niggle, which really annoys me in books, is several basic historical inaccuracies which should have been picked up.
Girls in 1948, bemoaning the lack of young men because they'd died in the trenches in France. That was WW1 not WW2.
A child in 1940 asking for a tissue. Rare, a handkerchief was more likely.
Someone wearing a very short mini skirt in 1960, when hemlines were only just above the knee.
If the author gets it wrong, someone should get it right.
6 people found this helpful
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