Just Say No!
From the opening chapters of Swinson's “The Candy Shop,” readers are immediately thrown into the world of drug addiction through the eyes of an addict. We meet Faith Simmons, a wife, mother and assistant principal. Her life is far from perfect, but she is respected, has a nice home and a comfortable lifestyle. But that quickly changes with one sentence, "I'll do it, just this one time." Faith succumbs to addiction and her life spirals out of control. Drugs. They consume your mind, body and soul. There is no teacher like experience, and Faith has to learn that the hard way.
The premise is ripe with possibility, but unfortunately that possibility is not explored. The whole add water and stir formula for drug addiction didn't work for me. I know that no one ever aspires to become an addict and that things happen, but this was a bit much. We're talking about a grown woman here, not an easily swayed young child that falls prey to peer pressure to fit in. Had Faith's downward spiral into addiction been more realistic maybe this book would have been more believable. “The Candy Shop” started off on shaky ground and never really stabilized. There is nothing here that we haven't seen/read before. The characters failed to move me. The plot didn't excite me. The ending didn't come quick enough.