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Tackle!! The latest Jilly Cooper

33 replies

blobby10 · 14/11/2023 09:24

Its not brilliant so far - much of the first chapter seems to be spent summarizing what happened in the previous book(s). I'm sorry that its not gripping me like the others did - maybe its my age - but I'm about a third of the way through and normally would stay up into the small hours to read the latest JC but this one I'm finding easy to put down. Hopefully it will pick up pace soon .........!

Is anyone else reading it yet?

OP posts:
Indianajet · 17/11/2024 17:50

I gave up on Tackle - the only books of hers that I really enjoyed and re-read are Riders, Rivals and Polo. The others went steadily downhill.

ohyesido · 17/11/2024 18:04

Mount was the worst book I've ever read.

Graphic descriptions of women becoming aroused by a stud farm?

And who thinks being called Buttercunt by married man in his 60s during sex is flattering and complimentary....?

HausofHolbein · 17/11/2024 18:25

After Wicked, they were all utterly awful. And don't get me started on how inaccurate the later Audible narrations were (Helen suddenly with an English accent, etc...)

Lilactimes · 24/11/2024 23:57

I hadn’t read any for 20 - 30 odd years … then watched Rivals on Disney and loved it. So listened to Rivals and Polo again on Audible. Really missing them now I’ve finished them. Still don’t think I can face any of the others tho. Especially after all these reviews!

Ozgirl75 · 11/12/2024 09:00

I’m reading Tackle right now and honestly, it’s so cringemakingly poor. Why is everyone “known as” something? She started that idea in one of the musical ones and it’s like, there are already feckin hundreds of characters and now we have to learn two names of them all as well?
None of the characters have any depth to them, I don’t care about any of them, they’re so one dimensional.
I loved Polo, Riders and Rivals and liked The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous but none of the others have been good since then and this one is only slightly better than Mount which I couldn’t even finish.

burnoutbabe · 11/12/2024 09:06

Spot on.

If I didn't have the last 2 as library books I'd not have finished.

I have got Mount in paperback now and failed to get more than halfway through. But I have re-read the earlier ones a fair few times. (Maybe not Pandora)

Maybe I get rid of any from wicked onwards and just have fond memories. It's only Dora who I like in new books but I had an idea she was a dumpy thing? (Lizzie like)

I did see jilly cooper live recently. She should stop writing, everyone has such fondness for her. (Or just don't write huge novels-short articles would work)

PipsielovesNelson · 11/12/2024 14:29

While none of the 11 books in the series can be considered “literature”, as Jilly Cooper progressed through the series, she was actually trying to engage in some sort of social discourse, especially in the later books like Mount and Tackle, which complete the redemption arc of RCB, everyone’s favorite man/child/jackass. From the end of the book Jump (which you can skip) and at the beginning of the book Mount, it is obvious that Rupert was feeling overwhelmed by the chaos in his life (kids and grandkids taking advantage of Taggie’s kind heart, work taking him away from home constantly for weeks on end, his father’s deteriorating mental status, Billy’s death, his looming 60th birthday) and he dealt with it by running away, both physically and emotionally. There is an interesting conversation in Mount between Rupert and his business partner, Valent, where Valent tries to counsel him about “slowing down and appreciating what you have or you risk losing everything”. Of course, Rupert ignored his advice. In spite of his personal and professional success, throughout the series, Rupert remains hopelessly insecure, especially where Taggie is concerned. He is also terribly self-centered and rarely takes time to reflect about how his behavior might impact those around him. In Mount, Rupert’s life devolves into a “perfect storm”, triggering a six-month long, massive adult temper tantrum that causes him to push away everyone and everything he loves and engage in bad behavior. His bad behavior with Gala was obviously him searching for the closeness and affection he felt with both Billy and Taggie that he thought was lost to him. He was certainly not in love with her. It was just sex, which is what he always turned to when he felt lost and alone before Taggie came into his life and, after 22 years, he reverted to type. Much has been made of the ridiculous term that he utters when he is intimate with Gala. I think that Jilly Cooper inserted this bit of outrageousness to highlight that Gala was just an object to him, like so many of the women he bonked before he married Taggie, as he never uses her name during those interactions. Also, their interactions were limited, spaced out over the course of 6 months and were precipitated each time by jealousy over attention paid to Taggie by the evil Jan, his demented father’s totally hot, young caregiver who lived with them and with whom Taggie had formed a close relationship because he gave her the much-needed support that Rupert did not give her because he was away on business so often and was crabby and short with her (and everyone else) when he was home. Oh Rupert, how could you do this to Taggie? Well, because, at the of 60, he still harbored some of the massive insecurity that fueled his bad boy behavior as a young man—he had matured over the course of his marriage, but not completely. When he finally realizes that his arrogant, self-centered behavior resulted in his failure to protect and support Taggie at a time when she desperately needed him to be there for her and almost caused him to lose everything he truly loved, Rupert finally looks beyond himself and grows up. In the subsequent book, Tackle, there are a couple of instances when he admits to the reader that, at one time, he might have been tempted to misbehave, but no more. He is clearly more self-aware and his marriage, as well as his relationships with his children and close friends, are on solid ground. Finally!!!!!!!! Mount is a tough book, but it paints a realistic picture of our much-adored RCB and how hard it is to find personal growth, even when surrounded by true love. If you liked Rivals and the Rupert/Taggie relationship arc, you should read it. I must admit, I had to wade through Tackle, but the exchange between Rupert and Taggie on the last page redeems it. 😀

ICantBelieveItsNotButtercunt · 19/12/2024 19:54

SparklingSparkle · 28/11/2023 05:12

Margcunt would be worse.

Time for a brief name reincarnation 😆

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