©2002
Books: 2
Chapters: 46
Pages: 291
First let me begin this review by saying that I read this book back in 2015. However, after I read a book, I always try to write out my feelings on the story when I finish. Sometimes, I’m moved to write a great deal to type up later. Other times, I just feel up to writing a very basic review. I never intended for it to take me five YEARS to get it on my GoodReads account, but it has. Obviously, by now, I don’t really remember much about the story, though sometimes my notes help jog my memory. So, if the following review doesn’t really say much or deal too much with the story or plot, that’s probably because I wasn’t moved by one or the other or both to write more than I did. However, such as it is I give to you.
Book Summary: Gabrielle “Ellie” Cavanaugh is a 30-year-old investigative reporter whose job has prepared her to take on the toughest investigation of her life: her 15-year-old sister, Andrea’s, death from twenty-three years ago. The reason? Her murderer was let out on parole, and she’s convinced that, though he was convicted and given a lengthy sentence, it wasn’t enough because handsome Rob Westerfield’s not only guilty of murder but shouldn’t be allowed to roam Westchester County free. But proving her case against Rob isn’t just the toughest job she’s ever done—it’s also the deadliest.
My Review (spoiler alert!)—I don’t know why, but I just didn’t like Ellie. I never “took” to her. Usually, when you read such stories, you’re pushing for the heroine, wanting to see her come out on top, etc., but with Ellie Cavanaugh, I just didn’t really care, and I’m not exactly sure why. She isn’t overly feministic or too rude (she does have her moments, though) or anything that usually puts me off modern heroines, but I just couldn’t get into her. Actually, I didn’t really care for anyone in this book, not even the murdered sister, Andrea, whom I probably liked least of all.
That said, the ending (chapter 45) was good. I liked how her father and half-brother, Teddy, rescue her (and brought a tear to my eye, the very last paragraph of chapter 45).
I wasn’t certain how Mary Higgins Clark would finish this. Was Rob going to be “it,” or would there be a twist? Actually, I’d hoped for a twist—not because I liked Rob any but because, I guess, I didn’t like Ellie and wanted to see her knocked down a peg with a murderer she never saw coming. I wondered, if there were a twist, if her father would turn out to be “it” and this was some case of child molestation or just a very freaky overprotective father who worshiped his daughter a little TOO zealously and, in a fit of anger at being defied by “Daddy’s Little Girl,” he beat her. I didn’t see how the giggling Ellie heard worked into that scenario, but I wondered if maybe Paulie Stroebel may’ve been there.
Anyhow, it turns out to be Rob, which leads me to two questions: (1) Why the title “Daddy’s Little Girl” (the title makes it sound as if the father is somehow going to be involved in it. I know it relates to the music box, but…I don’t know—it just didn’t work for me) and (2) Why the strange ending? Chapter 45 is the “wrap-up,” when Rob’s captured in the act of trying to kill Ellie, and chapter 46 is a “one-year-later” epilog, which I felt was rather sloppily done. It was such a rushed ending, as if Mary Higgins Clark was getting bored with the story and wanted to hurry the finale along. But the one thing she didn’t really explain was why Rob used the alias “Jim Wilding”—was he supposed to be a split personality? Was he as the waitress-cum-psychiatrist said: a sociopath (in which case, why the disguise and alias? I didn’t think sociopaths worried about being caught—enough to take on an alter ego)? Was he just weird? What was his reason for BEING Jim Wilding? Did his parents know the extent of his villainy? Why did he kill “Phil”? Did she make him mad?”
There were questions left unanswered, which is why I say the epilog seemed rushed. Yes, Rob’s tried and convicted, but what gives about the Jim Wilding angle, and did his parents know he was so whacked out? And what about his cohort in the truck at the end? And what about Alfie and Dan Mayotte? Mary Higgins Clark tells us about Ellie’s marrying Pete Lawlor, which was kind of obvious as to that ending, but she didn’t tell us about the other loose ends. She introduces Amy Phyllis Rayburn and family and Dan Mayotte at the very end but doesn’t say anything other than Dan’s given a pardon. But what about the Rayburns? Did they heal the past between Dan and themselves? And what happened to Alfie? And what about Herb Coril? The statute of limitations ran out on Alfie’s case, but did he—I don’t know—get any sort of closure for his brother’s vindication or maybe bad press from being outed? And was Coril dead? Did Will Nebels do time? What about Marco Longo—did he and his wife move to Colorado after all? And what was Joan’s reaction to Rob’s actually being “it,” or how about Paulie, his mom, or Mrs. Hilmer not to mention all the people Rob hurt along the way: the women who owned that restaurant, the waitress-doctor, Chris Cassidy, et al? And how did Officer White and Detective Bannister take the news? Too many threads not tied off at the end. It would’ve been nice to read of EVERYONE’S reaction to Rob Westerfield’s being the actual killer.
Grade: B