Rachael Preston's new book is all about choices--particularly the choices we make rashly--and then the long hard road of living with them.
The first domino falls way back in the day, when Laura Fisher makes her first pivotal choice. When the story begins, she and her two children are living with the consequences of that choice, and in this case there is no 'for better or for worse,' it's all been for worse. There are few pleasures in Laura Fisher's life, and just when there might be a chance for her to start over, to get a little happiness, the dreadful choice from the past shows up on her doorstep in the form of Ray Fisher, Laura's sometimes husband. He worms his way into the heart of his nearly-grown daughter, starved as she is for the male attention, and falls himself, surprisingly, for the son he's never met. It's Laura he can't melt, a result of the choices that he's made.
There are no real bad guys in The Fishers of Paradise. Even Ray Fisher, who is easy to hate in the beginning, manages to make us understand him, and eventually, makes us wish things had been different for him. He, however, like all of the characters in this wonderful novel, have made their choices long before, and the only hope left is that the next generation makes better choices. Even still, when the cycle is finally broken for the children, it's heart-breaking.
This is a wonderful, beautifully written book. Rachael Preston is an amazing writer. This is a story that utterly absolutely OWNED me on every page. It's must read.
I can't wait until she writes another.