Charlotte and Maddi’s mother died six months ago, and their father is already sleeping with her assistant, Amber. The girls are suspicious of the circumstances surrounding their mother’s death, and the more he acts like she never existed, the more they wonder whether he and Amber had something to do with it. People’s hearts don’t just stop. It seems like Amber is determined to take everything from them, but nobody is prepared for what happens when the secrets finally come out. I received a free e-ARC through NetGalley from the publishers at Random House/Delacorte Press. Trigger warnings: parent death, suicide, mild gore, drug use, mental illness, depression, infidelity, grief.
I had higher hopes for this, but while it’s at times an interesting character study, there aren’t a lot of thrills to be had until the end. Most of the novel hinges on the family’s secrets. Some of them are appropriately twisty, and some of them are fairly typical high school problems, but all the reveals come rapid-fire at the end. It nicely ramps up the tension there, but it also means that the rest of the book is fairly lackluster, plot-wise. There’s a lot of time spent wondering what’s happening and not much spent on things actually happening.
I enjoyed Charlotte and Maddi’s sister relationship, and their loyalty and care for each other make it easily the strongest relationship in the book. A close second is probably the sisters’ relationship with their mother. Even though she’s not on the page, the flashbacks to her last months kept me guessing about how she really died. I’ll admit that I had a lot of trouble distinguishing Charlotte and Maddi though. They’re close in age, and while Maddi is the more responsible older sister, their inner monologues are practically the same. I kept forgetting whose chapter I was in.
If you’re the kind of reader who needs all questions answered, this is a good book for you, since everything wraps up pretty neatly by the end. I was interested in the conclusion and guessed some things, while others were a surprise, but I’m not sure how satisfying it is overall. I understand the reasoning for the ending, but there’s a kind of wishy-washiness to the final twist that takes some of the punch out of it. I enjoyed it well enough, but it’s a bit forgettable overall.
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