Jane Jesmond brings back the offbeat adrenaline junkie, the unforgettable Jen Shaw, after the harrowing events in Cornwall in At The Edge. Jen has slowly recovered, learning to rediscover her passion as she becomes climbing fit, although she is a trifle more safety conscious. An enigmatic postcard has her travelling and climbing the mountains near Alajar, in Andalusia, Spain, as she wonders whether to reconnect with Nick Crawford, feeling ambivalent and uncertain. Nothing pans out as expected, and Jen finds herself going to Malta as the family home of Tregonna comes under threat, and the only person who can do anything is her hippy, free spirited mother, Morwenna. Morwenna is attempting to help her friend, the Libyan writer, Nahla Shebani, and her 2 young daughters, Rania, and the traumatised Aya.
Nahla, a activist facing dangers in Libya, escaped through a precarious boat journey to Malta, she has been released from detention, into the stressful conditions of a refugee camp, living in a container. A shocked Jen is out of her depth and cannot comprehend the horrors the refugees are living under, the heat and overcrowding, the state of the wasteland, the misery, despair, hopelessness, poor health, trauma, the suffering, the understandable anger and bitterness, and the tensions that result in riots. Events culminate in the suspicious death of Nahla at the Musaeada Clinic, and Morwenna far too preoccupied with trying to help Rania and Aya to do anything about Tregonna, leaving Jen having to contact a father she has been estranged from for years to prevent the sale of their home.
Jen and Morwenna find themselves on a terrifying people smuggling boat journey on the Mediterranean Sea in their efforts to protect Rania and Aya from nightmare fates, only to run across a familiar figure, but can he be trusted? Jesmond writes a harrowing story, of the grim=realities facing refugees, the evil criminals intent on stealing vulnerable refugee children, the dangerous boat smuggling enterprises, and countries that dehumanise people who have gone through the kind of terrors none of us can imagine, and which we gain insights into through Jen's reactions to the refugees and the camp they are forced to live in. Jen is a marvellous character around which this informative, suspenseful, gripping and adventurous tale is woven. Highly recommended. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.