In early 1987, Tess Dawes disappeared without a trace after leaving her job at the shopping centre.
In 2018, Katherine Ashworth has moved to Lowbridge, her husband's hometown, after the death of her daughter. She is not coping, existing on a diet of vodka and sleeping pills. Husband Jamie tells her to shape up or he'll book her into rehab. So Katherine starts making an effort, and becomes involved with the local historical society. She eventually learns about Tess Dawes' disappearance and becomes preoccupied with it. The blurb states that an outsider's questions start uncovering secrets, but not really.
Somewhere inside of this book was a better story about a grief-stricken mother latching onto another tragedy of a young girl as a way of processing her own turmoil. Instead, we get a rather underwhelming, very slowly paced mystery drama that is more concerned with teen drama than it is with the various themes it is trying to address.
Lowbridge clumsily tries to draw various modern issues into its narrative: climate change, abortion, women's rights, bodily authority, class divide, toxic masculinity...all stuff I love to see addressed in a book, but wastes soooo much time on the 1986/1987 timeline with Tess and her friends that it all gets frittered away with the book's focus on teen trivialities. Seriously, I'm supposed to be reading an adult thriller, aren't I? I'm not interested in teen drama! So many books are doing this these days and it's getting infuriating! I don't read adult books to read about teenagers!
This heavy focus on the 1986/1987 teen timeline also detracts from the modern-day storyline. Katherine never actually discovers anything for herself. It's up to characters to randomly come clean to her, or for the antagonist to literally out themselves for no reason at all, for Katherine to be able to fill in the gaps. The motive for murder is weak and completely out of left field. Basically, the two timelines are different stories very tenuously linked, especially because it takes nearly half the book for Katherine to even learn about Tess!
Katherine was a complex character done surprisingly well. She's not always likable, but she is believable. The friendship she develops with the members of the historical society are a highlight. I wavered between 1 and 2 stars, because as a mystery thriller it completely failed, and I had to force myself to finish it (otherwise it would have taken me two weeks), but the characterisation was strong. But if you decide to give this one a go, set your expectations...low.