I was given this book by Transworld Publishers via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review, thank you.
I am a big fan of Tamar Cohen's novels, her ability to dig into human emotion and interactions, exploring both elements of light and shade is exceptional. This book was one of those books that had the ability to make you feel so many things about the events happening within it.
The entire book is written over the period of a weekend, a weekend of a wedding and involves family and friends from both the Bride and Groom, but it's much more than "just" a story about a wedding, it's a wedding that will unravel not only secrets hidden to the reader, but unravel some of the people attending the wedding at the same time. To some degree it's a book where I could say "do not only not judge the book by it's cover, but don't judge the characters on first impressions either"
Not all is as it seems. And that's where it gets really good, and interesting with an element of shock factor here and there. This book tackles relationships, not what you see, but what goes on behind closed doors and in the minds of those involved.
'I don't mind the sex,' I once tried to explain to Louise. 'It's the kissing I find so difficult.' She'd nodded, her shiny, conker-coloured hair shimmering in the lamp-light. 'You're frightened of intimacy,' she told me. 'It's very common, I'm afraid. Particularly where resentment has been allowed to build up.'
I thought a book set over an entire wedding weekend would be boring but it wasn't, as Tamar Cohen successfully explores and reveals what each character is really all about in a very clever, and intriguing way.
Protect him from what? I want to ask. But I can't speak because there is something big lodged in my throat. I think it might be my heart.
The book packs a punch, especially once the secrets behind who is who relating to what and some of the secrets hinted at early in the book come to light, can't possibly go into those without spoiling it for you, the reader.
I laughed with the characters, some of the writing is just really cleverly witty, but so REAL, so RAW, because it's real life, this is no made-up namby pamby world that Tamar Cohen has created!
When did I start thinking of death all the time? I've always thought about it periodically. Who doesn't? That sudden shocking realization that one day the world will still be here, but I won't be in it. But this is different. Nowadays, I'll be trawling the supermarket aisles when all of a sudden it hits me. What's the point in getting the half-fat milk or the organic carrots or the low-salt baked beans? What's the point of agonizing over what to wear or how much I weigh or any of it? Sometimes I'm driving and I'll pass a new building that's just gone up and I'll think, That'll still be here when I'm dead, and it completely poleaxes me.
There are some profoundly moving and sad moments in the novel too and for me it was a very enjoyable reads as I lay back and let the characters tell me who they were, what they were REALLY thinking and why they were here. It's like peeling away layer upon layer.
4 stars, an easy read, perfect for fans of anyone that likes to see inside the human heart, mind and ponder why human beings do the strange things that they do.