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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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From other countries

Bionic Sarah
4.0 out of 5 stars A tender uplifting read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 March 2021
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What a beautiful book it’s rare to find stories of friendship between people of such different ages such as 80 plus Margot and 17 year old Lenni .The friendship is touching and tender as and very very real
I wanted to know more about each of the characters from the very beginning and although the ending seemed inevitable from the beginning in some way this was soothing
Not naming the illness precisely that either character had that was making their case terminal was another great idea it saved me from doing my usual and picking holes in the medical details .it added a hint of mystery to livexx X that were otherwise being laid bare
I would recommend this book thoroughly but recommend you have a box of tissues on hand for a bit of blubbing
6 people found this helpful
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Lauren Jade
4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful - get the tissues ready.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 April 2022
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This is a book which deals with some heart wrenching topics so be warned! It took me around half way through the book before I decided I actually 'liked' this book, hence why I gave it four stars and not five. But the last part of the book really is beautiful, the story shared between Lenni and Margot is creative and original. I haven't read anything like it personally, and I read a lot! The ending was perfect and I love a good ending. Due to Lenni's terminal illness diagnosis, she lives vicariously through the other characters, which makes this book so much more than just a story about terminal illness. Infact, it isn't about that really at all! All we know as the reader is that Lenni is very ill.
I would recommend this book!
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The Reading Room
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
4.0 out of 5 stars Deliberately emotive, but essentially positive
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 June 2022
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A bitter-sweet, heart-warming tale of humanity and kindness – 4 Stars

Lenni is seventeen while Margot is eighty-three, and even though this book begins with them both facing death, it is ultimately about life. It is emotive, and the tale swings from sadness to positivity and back again, but at the heart of this book is a tale of unlikely friendships, and the importance of giving and receiving kindness.

‘One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot’ is not an easy read in that it constantly reminds us of our own mortality and, for those alone in the world, how dependant we are on strangers to make our end-of-life experience a positive one. It is however a book that is intended to comfort, and comes packed with a good deal of humour and sage (often Christian-based) philosophies. It’s a very good debut novel, although I have to say I struggled to be convinced by Lenni as a character.

Overall: A good debut novel, and perhaps a good choice for a book club read.
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Flutterbies9
4.0 out of 5 stars Empathy needed for this one
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 1 February 2022
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This was a beautifully touching story of Lenni and Margot and was read as a Book Club choice for the month. I am sure I would never have chosen it myself so am glad that it was picked out to read.

In some respects I could see the chosen path of Lenni as a very logical path, but never an easy one to stay on and stay focussed for, especially for someone so young. It was almost as if Margot and Lenni had changed maturity status, though Margot had also chosen her path and chose to keep Lenni company on the way for a time. Other characters came and went (pastor, red haired nurse, the temp etc.) all of whom were influenced by Lenni in some way or other in their own life changes.

I did love this book and think it will stay with me for a while, possible even be re-read (an honour I accord very few books).
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Kindle Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Pulls at the heartstrings
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 March 2022
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Oh this book moved me, which is something I don't find in a lot of books . The story has humour, joy, sadness, and leaves you at the end, just sitting and thinking... I was torn between each characters tales. I wanted it to stay on Lennie's life then when it was Margot's turn I didn't want to go back ... I was tossing and turning throughout. I just loved both their stories. Well done to the author it is definitely one of my recommending books this year
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gorgeousbella
4.0 out of 5 stars A lovely original story.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 January 2022
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This is such a lovely read, the story line being so different from anything else I have ever read. The friendship that emerges between Margot and Lenni from a chance meeting at an Art class, is both heartwarming and believable, so much so you feel that maybe more friendships such as this should be encouraged
Other characters in the book are brought to life so vividly, Arthur the Hospital Chaplain, Humphrey, Margot’s second husband, the Author weaves their parts into the storyline with such ease interweaving their equally important part in both Margot and Lenni’s lives.
Although the nature of the storyline contains sad moments it makes you smile too, making you realise that in sad difficult times there can also be a positive
side to everything we have to face in life.
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K_reader
4.0 out of 5 stars It's ok
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 June 2022
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Rather quick read, despite being a bit slow at places. It's not the best book I have ever read but not the worst either. It's just OK.
The theme of letting people /things go etc. is pushed a bit too much, too often. It takes away from the story. Makes it harder to believe in the story or feel truly engaged.
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Benita
4.0 out of 5 stars Poignant and hopeful
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 January 2022
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Whatever age we are, we are loved and able to love.
A heart-warming story of finding that we are loved even while we are in the last stage of our lives, when even the youngest among us has valuable lessons to impart to their elders.
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