To be honest, I rated this 2.5 on my blog. I desperately wanted to like this -- the blurb hit ALL my buttons and I was excited when I started...but anyway, here's my review:
What is this about: the secrets in one family that culminate in an unexpected dangerous showdown for them all.
What else is this about: there's an attempt to pull in a crime twist to the story that drove me crazy.
Should you read this: No. This book doesn't know what it wants to be. It ignores its strengths and tries for a twist it never reaches.
This is the story of Anya, Callum, Zac and Georgia and the secrets they keep in their family. But, ultimately, it is Georgia that the story revolves around.
She is your stereotypical angsting teenager. At 17, the author seems to think she is old enough in some ways and yet portrays her as a bratty child in others. To an extent, I can understand this, but there's very little to empathise with as a result. Georgia doesn't grow in this story, not until the end where there's no time to see the difference in her. A few pages devoted to a change isn't satisfying.
Her secret is an illicit relationship, which isn't a spoiler, and she spends the book wallowing in her misery at being apart from a guy she knows she can't be with. That's kind of it. She wants to share it with her best friend, but they too are growing apart and Georgia doesn't know how to fix that.
She argues with her mother a lot, ignores her father and tolerates her brother.
Georgia is tiring. Teenagers, especially at 17, are capable of so much more than wallowing and being boy obsessed. What is driving me crazy in this book is that the family dynamic has such potential but, it never quite reaches it.
Anya and Callum are parents who are at odds with each other and their kids, and neither knows how to bridge either of these gaps. Anya is offered more care here (what little there is) than Callum and that's through her relationship with Georgia. Funnily enough, she says Georgia talks more to Callum, but she is the only one who talks properly to Georgia and even then their conversations are fights or sullen, short ones. It's an opportunity for angst, I guess, but Callum could have provided so much more insight into the family and Georgia.
Instead he is the weak link in this book, offered very little depth compared to Anya. And what depth there is, is offered by something you can see coming a mile away.
Zac, oh Zac. He is the little brother, the one no one pays attention to but knows all, so to speak. His secret has to do with Georgia, but here is where the book annoyed me no end. Anya is a counsellor, she works at a school where she deals with girls and boys and all the messiness that comes with hormones. In an era of Steubenville, or revenge porn and God knows what else is out there, this is what Anya tells her son on the subject of a photo that went viral (of a girl that eventually left the school) earlier in the timeline of the book:
The girls need to understand the dangers of this; and the boys need to be mature and responsible enough to protect them.
I stopped reading right there and spent several hours trying to figure out whether I wanted to read more. For the record, boys should be mature and responsible and not share private photos their girlfriends trust them with -- you know why? Because they're decent human beings and they know what they've been entrusted with.
Given that viral is mentioned in the blurb, I assumed Anya would address this in some way by the end of the book and the author would correct her ... but nope. This was a reason for Zac to try and protect his sister later in the book.
I rolled my eyes so hard. I can appreciate that it's some sort of character motivation for Zac, but the sentiment was expressed badly, and there were no consequences experienced by certain characters.
And somehow in all of this, there's a side story involving someone stalking Georgia, through no fault of her own -- but the person whose responsibility it is? Is in the hospital, and only wakes in time to warn Georgia about her stalker. Georgia keeps telling readers how close she is with this particular character, but really, there's no substance to this relationship for me as a reader, which in turn made the stalker situation stick out like a sore thumb in this narrative.
There's much potential in this story, but there's so much happening that the characters, their relationships and what made them good in the beginning is lost in the rush for a twist.