If You Knew Her
wasn't as bad as I thought it would be.
This just wasn't good enough to warrant more than two stars because it was filled with the stereotypical tropes of domestic thrillers.
** Minor spoilers ahead **
Alice is the ward nurse at St. Catherine's on 9B, where the most serious and grievously injured patients are brought.
She has befriended Frank, who is alive but stuck in locked-in syndrome and the newest patient, Cassie, a young woman with a severe head injury after surviving a hit and run.
The POVs switch from Alice, Frank and Cassie respectively, detailing how they each ended up in their current circumstances.
Alice is pushing her forties and desperate to have a child with her devoted husband, David, despite several heartbreaking miscarriages.
Frank, an alcoholic who lost his wife and daughter in a divorce because of the disease, finds himself with a lot of time on his hands after suffering a stroke that caused his paralysis.
He yearns for redemption and repentance and as his condition begins to improve, becomes the unlikely witness to the person responsible for Cassie's condition.
Finally, there is Cassie, who is the least known to us, because she is described in the third person.
We see her whirlwind marriage to Jack and observe her daily life as she adjusts to living in the country, away from London, her grief and sorrow over the loss of her mother to cancer not long ago and her interactions with her mother-in-law.
I loved the idea of a character who is incapacitated and unable to speak who sees and listens to everything that goes on around him, while everyone else underestimates him (except Alice).
In the beginning, Frank sounded shallow and selfish, only caring about booze and himself, but he began to lose his self pitying behavior and realize how much harm he had done to his ex-wife and daughter by not putting them first.
His selfless choice to try to communicate who the perpetrator is behind Cassie's injury leads Alice to put the pieces together and discover the culprit.
Alice is a decent character; her infertility and desire for a child to call her own is juxtaposed against Cassie's pregnancy and her vigilance in protecting the woman and unborn child from future harm.
She plays Nancy Drew to find out more about Cassie, who she is and where she came from, and in the end, after another devastating miscarriage, comes to peace with her own family of two, a very way to end the story.
My only issue was Cassie herself; a hum-drum woman with no family to call her own, she naturally marries a man we know nothing about.
Readers are not given exposition or background as to how and why this couple got together.
Then, the usual cliches quickly make themselves at home:
1. Adultering on Jack and his father, Mike's part.
2. Jack adultering with Nikki, Cassie's BFF.
3. Cassie kissing Jack but feeling embarrassed about it because Nikki is there and looking for love and Cassie feels like it might be rude expressing her love for her husband. Seriously.
4. The creepy love Jack's mom has for her only son. Her excuse is that, as a mother, she will do anything to protect her son, including not tell Jack what an adultering dick his father was to protect the man's memory but I call it Freudian.
5. The potential love triangle between Cassie, Jack and her guy friend, Jonny.
It got a bit Lifetime-y at certain parts, but at least, Jack does step up at the end, a shocking rarity. Also, another rarity, David, Alice's husband, is a good man.