Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Review of Ugly

Ugly
MSCOZY avatar reviewed on


A most riveting tale. I read it in two days and just could not put it down. Constance, called Clare, Clear and Clearie, is the third child born to a Jamaican husband and wife who emigrated to England. Her father wins money in the Lotto but he divorces his wife and does his own thing. He buys a number of houses, lives in them as he works on them and then rents them out. He does supply some financial support for his children but I think the mother also receives assistance.

From the start, Clare, as she is mostly called throughout the book, is totally unloved by her mother. Her mother calls her names, of which ugly is just one, and literally sees nothing beautiful or redeeming in her daughter, making fun of her looks. How this child lives and survives is the gist of the story. She faces verbal abuse, mental abuse and a great deal of physical abuse. There are also times of sexual molestation by her mother's so-called friends and her mother's boyfriend/second husband. It gets bad enough that she herself goes to the Social Services and tries to get placed with any other family. But of course, a child cannot just do that and she leaves frustrated. Some of the physical abuse leads to medical problems and surgery, which the mother could care less about not even visiting her in hospital.

She takes things into her own hands and attempts suicide. She is not taken to a doctor but is made to wait to see if she lives as her mother worries about the police. Her father being divorced from her mother rarely ever sees the children. She has no one that can help as everything in the house is controlled by her mother, even the food they eat. She stockpiles it in her bedroom under lock and key. She has no friends and all the older girls are expected to do all the housework, cooking, cleaning, washing etc.

Clare is a rather smart girl but the teachers are clueless about her life at home. Her siblings are all treated much better than her, never suffering in any way near as she does at her mother's hands. When Clare starts to work, the mother demands Clare pay her rent, for food, electricity etc. since she her mother calls her a grown woman now simply because she works. Towards the end, her mother simply moves out of the house with all the children, except her oldest three which are all girls, Clare being the youngest of the three. But the two older are allowed to go to the new home as they want, just not Clare. After a short time, Clare is alone in the house mostly and her mother comes calling for money for the rent, electricity, and even for her bed , sheets and pillow!

It is amazing how this young girl managed to make it in the world, no thanks to either of her parents, but especially her mother. She does make something of herself (I do not want to spoil it by telling what she becomes) and goes on to write this book "Ugly." When her mother reads it, she becomes incensed and files a defamation of character suit against her own daughter, Clare. Talk about nerve!

This particular copy includes parts of the Lawsuit and its final outcome. This is not a fairy tale. It moved me in many ways to read of her trials and her triumphs. It is a very sad but moving story.