A fairly intense family melodrama/thriller set in a small Tennessee town, No Way Home had its moments, but ultimately failed to do what thrillers need to do-- thrill. As a mystery thriller, it did not really succeed either; you knew the ending pretty much early on. One cover blurb proclaimed "A thriller that stirs the emotions as well as excites the senses." Hum.
Our main protagonist, Lillie, was born, raised and still lives in Cress County, Tennessee, married to a guy named Pink (old nickname) with two children. MacDonald sets the scene with a social event in town, introducing the cast. MacDonald also spends lots of time establishing the relationship between Lillie and her daughter Michele, who was born with congenital heart problems or something, but after lots of trials and tribulations (and surgery), she is now a typical teenager. If you read the cover blurb on the back, you know Michele will be murdered, an act that sets the stage for the rest of the novel. Who killed Michele? Why does the sheriff seem to put the murder on the back burner?
MacDonald also brings in some romance of a sort, when Michele's biological father Jordan, a successful soap opera actor, comes to town. It seems Lillie and Jordan had a thing, but shortly after sickly Michele was born, Jordan took off for his first acting gig and never really looked back. Now, however, after the murder of his only child, he is determined to find out who did it, along with Lillie. Oh the drama!
I might have rated this a bit higher, but I felt MacDonald tried a little too hard to invest this story with emotional content, having Lillie pushed and pulled in various directions. Excessive melodrama. That, and the ending you could see from a mile away. 2.5 stars, rounding down for the denouement.