Betrayed and abandoned by her husband, who has run off with a younger woman, Nora heads for New Orleans with Simone, a rape victim faced with getting through her assailant's trial, and Poppy, a woman who has recently discovered the joys of religious faith.
To TV audiences she may be better known as a four-time Emmy-nominated writer and producer (Joan of Arcadia, Judging Amy) and the co-Executive Producer of Homeland, but to avid readers she’s a novelist with 11 published works whose imagination has been honored by numerous institutions, including the American Library Association in both their Best Books and Notable Books categories.
I'm not sure what it was that caused me to fall in love with this book. A main character who seemed a bit of a kindred spirit maybe, enough intrigue in the plot to keep it moving, maybe it was the fact that I first heard about and started searching for this book before online orders were a thing and I remember well spending hours picking through second-hand bookstore shelves until I abandoned it – only to find it on kindle years later. In any case, it didn't disappoint. I've ordered a hard copy and will undoubtedly return to it.
Modern women's fiction. Different. Three women who were friends in college reunite in New Orleans for a rape trial. Weird dynamics. Were they/are they really friends? Was one of them really raped? Is another crazy? And does the main character have an epiphany? An interesting read.
It's a book with the characters self reflecting while being there for a friend, if they were really friends) during one of theirs rape trial. None of the characters were likable. The story was slow that I got bored but finished it to see what happened. I didn't get the answer. Waste of my time reading. Glad it was a free book from Amazon Prime.
This book came to me via my friend, April. I believe that the author is a friend of hers. Knowing that I'm an author myself, she lent it to me. I It pains me to say, since the book is written by a friend of a friend, I didn't really like this story at all. Nora is the most believable character of them all. But even she is a bit strange. A taxi driver, Leo saves her from being mugged. It turns out he was in love with Poppy, Nora's college friend. Both of the women have been summoned to New Orleans for what they think is a vacation. Instead it's to support Simone at her rape trial. I couldn't sympathize with Simone because there was nothing about her that made me feel she'd been raped. She was going to go home even before a verdict was reached. And the whole story line that Poppy was crazy and that her father had buried a baby in the basement of their home was too over the top in the scheme of things. Even more so when she dug up cat bones instead.
Poppy's estranged husband, Adam was so flat that in the end maybe Nora deserved him. The characters were uninteresting and disjointed from the entire story.
I liked the character of Nora. I believed her feelings and the things that she experienced. I did find that the cab driver who saved her was connected to one of her goods friends from years back hard to believe. Some coincidences are easy to believe this not so much.
This story wasn't what I expected. It's a story about self reflection and friendship. It's not what I would call a 'light read' because of its subject matter. But I think the story is worth reading.