A quick, linear - in two timelines: 1951 and 2018 - and satisfying mystery, written in a completely readable, brisk manner. No wasted words here, folks!
And not a cozy-cozy either, though it has those cozy elements: elderly woman as MC, mystery involving her past, relatives which are caring yet frustrated. Yep. cozy-ish...
But also quite dark, and complex, as the reader has no idea what's (really) up because Edie, early 80's, has dementia. (This should be a familiar topic to so many these days as we older folk keep hanging on...)
Quick aside, and I almost add a personal reflection, so skip this paragraph if you're tired of me. But I had my first 'does-she-have-dementia-test' a year go. Anyhow, I flunked a major part of it because my (then) doctor had an accent which I sometimes found hard to understand. When she said 'remember this,' and said three quick words, I thought she was talking about her receptionist. (She had also just said I was to see the receptionist before I leave.) So when she later said, repeat those three words I was like: 'What three words?' Yep, failed that. But when a new doctor ALSO gave me a test - due to my age I was told - I got an A+, perfect. I even drew my clock using Roman numerals and asked the doctor: wanna see me write it in binary? The point is, I can identify with MUCH of this book.
But Edie? She's flummoxed, keeps seeing a friend from her teenage years, a girl who disappeared in 1951. She's struggling to remember what happened when, while also juggling caregivers, adult children and an environment which keeps constantly changing. It's poignant in places and darn exasperating in others. You just want to reach into the pages and kick-start poor Edie...
But she also has moments of startling clarity - and yep, that's dementia for you. One minute you can do the multiplication tables up into the 14's and the next you're struggling to understand what a nickel is. (Five cents in the US for Europeans.) At any rate, it was a quick and interesting read.
I'd pick up the next book by Ms. Critchley, for sure.
Five stars.