4 Stars.
Is it possible to rely solely on someone else and have it be to both of your detriments? Even if you have the tightest bond imaginable and can't imagine hurting the other? What if, in relying solely on each other, you end up enabling each other's behaviors and realize it a little to late to pick up the pieces?
In A Mother's Promise by Sally Hepworth, Alice Stanhope and her fifteen year old daughter, Zoe, are thick as thieves, the best of friends, loners. Alice successfully runs her own business, her daughter Zoe is a high school student, who suffers from a crippling case of social anxiety disorder. The only person that Zoe can even talk besides her mom is her friend Emily and even that has its disastrous moments. As soon as Zoe feels afraid, is given attention, is laughed at or smiled at, she does the only thing that makes her feel safe, she runs home to her mother. This, make Alice feel needed. It has always been the two of them against the world, so when Alice gets a devastating cancer diagnosis, she isn't afraid for herself, she fears for Zoe. And for Zoe, who can barely speak to anyone but Alice, her life will never be the same. She must be strong for her mother and find something within herself that's worth fighting for.
What they learn, is that they can't go it alone anymore and that comes in two forms: in Kate, a nurse at the hospital, who cares for Alice, and also takes Zoe under her wing, giving her advice and acting as a friend; and in Harry, a young teenage boy at Zoe's school, who, as it turns out has a few secrets of his own. All of this, aides Zoe in coming out of her shell like a small tiny butterfly, which her mother Alice witnesses and which gives her the peace she needs.
A Mother's Promise is about gathering a support system, of family, friends, acquaintances, whoever; to be around you when you need it most. It's about learning to love people for who they are, not judging them for who they aren't and allowing them to grow as people no matter how much it hurts, even if sometimes you get left behind.
Sally Hepworth wrote a sweet, endearing, easy to read novel, filled with characters who I couldn't help but love: Zoe; Kate; and even Harry. They grabbed my heart from the start and wouldn't let go. The storyline tied up nicely in the end and I could have walked away, happy - yet there were a few core elements of the story that I struggled with including: Alice's decision to reject treatment for her socially anxiety ridden daughter in her grade school years, and thereby enabling and perpetuating a full fledged social anxiety disorder in a teenaged Zoe. At first, I thought this was a huge oversight, but then I felt that in not making those choices, Ms. Hepworth chose for to Zoe struggle more later in life, allowing her to blossom at the end. This allowed her mother Alice to see the transformation, when little else was left.
All in all, a job well done for a lovely, heartfelt, easy read.
Thank you to NetGalley, St. Martin's Press and Sally Hepworth for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Published on NetGalley and Goodreads on 2.18.17.
*Will be published on Amazon on 2.21.17