Book Review: ‘Went to London, Took the Dog’ by Nina Stibbe

As a big fan of Stibbe’s writing (and her previous autobiographical book, ‘Love, Nina’), I requested this without actually knowing what it was about. I don’t regret this at all!

In fact, it’s kind of tricky to pin down what this book is actually about. It’s Nina Stibbe’s diaries covering her move to London (with dog, Peggy, as indicated by the title) in the period of an impending divorce. Leaving her home in Cornwall, Stibbe takes a spare room in the home of author Deborah Moggach (‘Debby’) and spends a year navigating a new life in the city. Surrounded by friends (including lots of other writers) and her grown-up children, Stibbe reevaluates her life and muses on a range of topics – from the big things (life, love, family) to the very small (toads, internet adverts, swimming at the lido).

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‘Reasons to be Cheerful’ by Nina Stibbe

Another one of the shortlist for the Comedy Women in Print Prize 2020, this is a lovely coming-of-age novel.

Lizzie is eighteen, keen to escape her slightly eccentric family and yet nervous about where her life may go. When she gets offered a job as a dentist’s assistant, a job that comes with the flat above the surgery, it seems time to leave the family home and start supporting herself.

It is 1980s Leicester and Lizzie is about to be thrown into a story of love, friendship, growing up, driving lessons and amateur dentistry. This story fits with Nina Stibbe’s other novels about the quirky Vogel family. However, I really don’t think I have read them in the right order, not that this seems to matter too much.

Lizzie is an engaging and naive narrator and her story is funny and charming. I’ve seen comparisons made between Stibbe and the late, great Sue Townsend – I can certainly understand this, as Lizzie has a touch of the innocence and humour that made Adrian Mole so popular, plus a wonderful cast of keenly-observed eccentrics around her.

This novel is at its best when it describes Lizzie navigating her everyday life – her interactions with her cantankerous dentist boss, her rather free-spirited mother, her snoozy driving instructor. I felt it was less successful when it got more serious, but that might be my personal taste – I wanted it to be happy and upbeat throughout.

Overall, I would definitely recommend this novel to those who enjoy humorous fiction in the vein of Adrian Mole – a naive protagonist adrift in an adult world that is hard to navigate. Lizzie is a sweet and charming narrator and you will want to read more of her story.

I received a free copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Header photo with thanks to Hybrid for sharing their work on Unsplash.