I made it! I’m genuinely amazed! May has been a really busy, slightly chaotic month and I can’t believe I managed to sustain my daily novella reading and posting. I’ve enjoyed it so much, and a massive thank you to everyone who has liked and commented, and ignored grammatical errors and general waffle, as some of these posts were written when I was very tired 😊
Many of you will know Simon has also been doing his #BookaDayinMay project, so it feels very apt to be finishing with a book he reviewed this month which had me scurrying off to spend my bookshop.org vouchers. The Driveway Has Two Sides by Sara Marchant (2018), is published by the lovely Fairlight Moderns and it arrived just in time!
The Driveway Has Two Sides follows the arrival of Delilah on an East Coast island. “The matriarchs” of the island are sceptical of this self-contained young woman.
“They were taciturn by nature, and the environment on the island required tact, discretion, and independence.”
They watch her clean out her house and start to reorganise her garden. Some of their questions are answered when Delilah changes out of her overalls into a dress, in order to greet a man the matriarchs judge as “too old for his long hair and overly blue denim jeans.”
This is Alan, Delilah’s married lover who is paying for everything. He’s entirely self-focussed and just likes Delilah as a pretty young thing to feed his ego, the same as his sports car:
“Delilah’s silence was one of Alan’s favourite things.”
Delilah doesn’t seem too bothered by this, as she views her relationships with older men as transactional. With Alan the material gains are obvious. With Ted, the sweet, kind, widowed Sherriff of the town, she wants his gardening know-how:
“She saw his gardening instinct win out over lust. She hugged her arms around her waist. She loved older men.”
There is a lot about gardening in this novella, which is a big win for me, I loved all the descriptions of garden plans and planting. But if you’re not into gardening don’t let that put you off, it’s not overwhelming!
“The shades and variations of green, highlighted by the specimen plants that were not green, looked more than natural. They looked supernatural. It was an Impressionist painting come to life. It was a masterpiece. Ted was an artist.”
We follow Delilah as she gets her physical house in order, while trying to work out how she is going to live. (Teeny criticism: there is talk of her ‘completing’ her garden. Any gardener knows you never complete your garden!)
“Later, during his trips by her house, Ted watched as she developed her kitchen garden in the front. He understood her reasoning; there was more room, more sun, a fence to use as garden bones. He still found it scandalous, yet also intriguing, he had to admit.”
The titular driveway is shared with her mysterious neighbour, someone even more contained than Delilah. He is attracted to her, as is seemingly every man in the book. Their relationship builds, and so in a sense the plot is who of three men Delilah will choose.
But that’s not a plot that particularly interests me, yet I enjoyed Driveway. I enjoyed it for its depiction of small-town life, its gentle humour and its humanity.
Unusually for me, I finished the short novel for once wishing it had been longer – I would have liked to have met Maisie Thompson, Delilah’s “friend and sparring partner” who we only hear about (unless I’ve forgotten a brief portrait near the start) and I would have loved to have had more of Mrs Oakapple and her fellow matriarchs. I also really wanted to know by the end what one of the characters did next.
The Driveway Has Two Sides is a gentle, quick read, especially recommended for those who like Katherine Heiny or Anne Tyler. I’m hoping Sara Marchant is going to be one of those authors who return to the same setting in further novels, so I can hear much more about the town and its sparky, kind residents.

Hurrah, well done – what an achievement and I’ve really enjoyed all of your reviews!
As for this one, I liked the sound of it when Simon wrote about it, and I now like the sound of it even more!!
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Thanks so much Kaggsy! I really appreciate you reading the posts and all your comments.
So glad this appeals – I hope you enjoy it if you get to it!
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congrats! And I love that you also read, and liked, this one
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Thanks Simon! And thank you for your enticing review of this one, I hadn’t heard of it at all and I really enjoyed it.
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What a feat to read a book and write a post every day for 31 days, Congratulations! I’m glad that you enjoyed the challenge. I certainly enjoyed reading your posts through May.
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Thanks so much! Strictly speaking I missed one and caught up the following day, but I’m taking it as a win!
So glad you enjoyed the posts 😊
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As you should! I did indeed. 😊
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Congratulations, you made it! Well done and thank you again for all the inspirating reviews. I don’t think my tbr will recover to normal proportions for some time to come!
I do already own this one as I won it in a Fairlight Moderns draw! However, my copy is called Becoming Delilah and has a different cover (I prefer your edition’s illustration). It’s definitely the same story though. I note I received it in March ’25 which makes me feel slightly guilty that I haven’t read it yet. This has resulted in much reshuffling and this one has now moved up quite some distance!
Are you going to concentrate on chunksters for June’s reading?!
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Thank you so much! And thank you for reading and commenting on all the posts, I’m amazed!
That’s really interesting to hear about your copy, because I was looking at the author’s website online and couldn’t work out if they were the same book, although they seemed to be. Thank you for confirming!
I do have an absolute whopper lined up for Mallika’s Reading the Meow in June, so that will definitely be a change of pace!
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Congratulations! And after some of the traumatic reads earlier in the month it’s good to see you easing off with something lighter!
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Thanks so much FF! Yes, it’s definitely a contrast to some of the earlier reads 😁
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I have been offline for essentially all of May, so have missed your amazing effort again this year – I truly don’t know how you do it (or how you get your hands on such a great batch of new novellas every year). Anyway, while I haven’t kept up with your reviews in a timely way, I am 100% sure I will revisit when it comes to Novellas in November later in the year – your posts are always a source of inspo for my November reading.
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Thanks Kate – it was definitely a close-run thing this year! I hope you find some you enjoy for #NovNov – I’ll look forward to your choices!
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Congratulations, and thank you! I know you’ve not been posting in the best of circumstances. This is a lovely one to end on. Another for my list.
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Thanks Susan! I really hope you enjoy this one.
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Congratulations on a fascinating month of reading and reviewing. I’ve enjoyed following along as and when I was able to – May seems to have flown by, so my time has been a bit limited this month!
I really need to take a look at Fairlight Moderns as they seem to be publishing some excellent books. Anne Tyler is a blind spot for me (I’ve tried a few of her novels and have never been able to get into them, unfortunately), but two friends in my book group are big fans, so I’ll mention this book to them!
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Thanks Jacqui! May has flown past, in fact 2026 seems to be disappearing rapidly!
I hope you can find some great Fairlight Moderns to read, and your book group friends enjoy this if they get to it!
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Many congratulations on such a great month. It’s a wonderful achievement.
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Thanks so much Cathy!
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Well done, I’m in awe of your achievement!
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Thanks so much Liz!
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Huge congratulations, what an achievement! And a great sounding title to end with, thank you!
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Thanks Jane! Glad this one appeals 😊
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Congratulations: what an achievement, in any year, but particuarly this one! Do you get a reward for your good behaviour? A nice bookbrowse somewhere, maybe?
Does Fairlight specialise in novellas? I only have one of their books, and it’s also very short (the Douglas Bruton you recommended at some point, I think) and now I wonder if that’s Their Thing.
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Thanks Marcie! I’m sorry for the delay in replying, I’ve just found two of your comments in my spam folder – how strange!
I don’t think Fairlight specify novellas in their publishing but everything I’ve read from them so far has definitely been a novella.
I did go to the charity bookshop across the road and came back with a stack, but that happens far too frequently for me to proclaim it a treat 😀
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Ohhhh, I was rather hoping you’d say that. Yes! (And who says that treats can’t be frequent, only they can’t be TOO frequent. And who better to judge than the treat-allocator and treat-recipient.)
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