This book took me awhile to get into, which is a shame. It took over an hour to read thirty pages. So yeah, this is a slow read, not that it is a bad thing, but when you've been in a reading slump for awhile, a slow book isn't a good thing.
Then there's Kate. She wasn't exactly the most likable characters, but after awhile she started to grow on me. Its hard not to like a psychologist that is a certifiable mess. (Do as I say, not as I do). I grew to like her as her friendship with Edward, a soldier with PTSD grows. With this friendship, you saw some changes come over both of Kate and Edward, and you also learned both characters backstories, which explained some of their preset behavior. (I had more sympathy for Edward though, as you learn they are both similar in their suffering)
Midway through the story we finally meet her daughter Lily, who has troubles of her own, related to her mother and father.
Then there's a side story going on called "Whispers In The Garden" which is just way too bizarre. I mean very bizarre. It ends up being a sweet part of a story that is full of drama and strangeness, be it family drama or the weirdness of Kate's clients. (She's a psychologist).
Kate's family drama is probably the most colorful and it gives so much more depth to the plot. It isn't just about a messed up woman tried to get her grandfather to sell his crumbling villa and move to someplace safe. No, there's a crocked uncle, an unknown sibling, a wacky mother, along with all the neighbors in the town that seem to be out for a piece of the villa.
I did enjoy the relationship that started to develop between Kate and Russ Nation in the last part of the novel.
As I gave myself time with this book, I started to like it more but it wasn't exactly what I was expecting. I hope that the author revisits these characters, because it would be nice to really see how things turned out for them as years go by.