Appleby House is Sylvia Smith's delightful, refreshingly candid
account of a year spent in a shabby bed-sit in1980s London's East End.
Smith's engrossing, understated narrative invests the story of shared
living: shifting allegiances, cleaning negotiations, debates about whose
turn it is to change the toilet paper (it's color-coded) and who's been
stealing whose hot water (50p buys 2 baths) with compulsive suspense of
the highest order. As tensions build around Laura's adamant refusal to
turn down her music or pretend to care about what her housemates have to
say, we find ourselves astonishingly addicted to the goings on in this
tiny corner of the universe. In the most artless and amusing way,
Appleby House thoroughly indulges our very human fascination with
the day-to-day and the surprising, often inexplicable, behavior of our
fellow members of the species.