This novel is about 4 women (two 30-something sisters and their mother and aunt) and the month they spend together in their family home on Tuckernuck Island, off Nantucket. Everything about this novel seems so contrived, from the constant references to brand names, the author's political views (really, what did that add to the novel?) to the drama these women drew to themselves.
Each of these women were incredibly shallow, petty, jealous and immature and seemed to be focused on only 4 things - sex, alcohol, their gourmet foods and themselves. And the men they attracted weren't much different. Like the women, none of the men's characters were very well developed, giving the impression they were all pretty much spineless, weak and, in most cases, tended toward mental instability. None of the characters were very likeable, especially the women.
There was the mother, Birdie, who blamed her ex-husband for 'ruining' her life by suggesting she not work but instead, stay home to raise their family while he worked for a living, earning multi-millions per year. An income that Birdie seemed to have no problem wasting on foolish things like a floating island in her pond! She also had no compunctions about sleeping with the husband of another woman and even became incensed when her lover expressed regret at his callousness when his wife passed away.
When India, Birdie's sister, isn't spending her time smoking, drinking and directing sexual comments and wolf-whistles toward a man decades younger than herself, not to mention he's also the love object of one, if not both of her nieces, she spends most of her time on the island brooding about her late husband who committed suicide years before and thinking about an art student who is trying to pursue a scandalous affair with her. We learn she virtually abandoned her husband emotionally and pretty much expected he should be able to seek out the help he needed on his own while suffering from a crippling depression. At the same time, she refuses to accompany him on an overseas trip where he ultimately takes his own like and then expresses resentment at having to travel there to bring his corpse back home.
Chess, the oldest daughter of Birdie, comes to the island after shaving her hair off after Michael, the fiancee she broke up with is killed in a questionable accident that might have actually been a suicide. She reveals she started this relationship and allowed it to progress more than a year before she finally admits she doesn't love Micheal enough to marry him and instead, is really passionately in love with is brother, who she met the same night as Michael. It should come as no surprise that Chess is incapable of considering the feelings of others given she also reveals she used another man, Barret, more than 10 years before by feigning interest in him simply to hurt her sister Tate who had a teenage crush on him.
Despite being a highly sought after computer genius, Birdie's younger daughter Tate is portrayed as an emotionally stunted 30-year woman who is consumed by her own petty jealousies and insecurities. Before even arriving at the island, she begins obsessing about her former crush and acts like a 12 year old, doing everything she can to call attention to herself whenever Barret is around and acting like a spoiled, petulant child the moment things don't go her way.
I did enjoy the descriptions of the island and house but felt it was incomplete and stopped a few times to look up more information about the area but a little more research on the author's part might have given me a better picture of the area. In addition to the characters' flawed personalities, it was things like the lack any more details than could be gleaned through Wikipedia; the author's ignorance for details that she did give (for instance, not understanding poison ivy does not spread through contact with the rash) and the unlikelihood of other scenarios in the story, (such as someone offering 1/2 to 3/4 of a million for a small piece of "art" made from seaweed, driftwood, shells and hot glue(???) even if it was made by a famous artist) had me constantly rolling my eyes!
I was listening to the audio version of this novel - if I had been reading a print copy, I doubt I'd have wasted my time reading beyond the first 30 pages or so. But since I was able to do other things as I listened - and I was already 4 books behind on my reading challenge - I continued through the end. But I have no plans on reading anything else by this author in the future.