Melanie Benjamin’s latest novel is a unique one! Set in California along the Southern coast in the 1950s and 1960’s, I can’t think of any book I have read similar to that. The novel focuses on two sisters who grow up with their mom who is totally wrapped up in the surfing lifestyle, well as wrapped up as you can be with two kids. Life is more complicated than just sun and surfing, we soon find out.
The novel opens with Mindy and Ginger, sisters, filming as extras on the beach in movie production. Once filming wraps for the night, one of the movie stars invites Mindy to hang out with the other actors. Mindy can’t believe she would be asked and goes to tell her sister, Ginger, the plan. However, Ginger wants to stay back with a boy and surf. Mindy is torn because that is not part of “The Plan”. Mindy, for the first time, leaves her sister behind and the story and mystery around “The Plan” begins to slowly unfold..
The first 70% of the book alternates between Mindy and Ginger’s points of view both in the past and in the future. The sisters have an unconventional upbringing especially as their mom, Carol, becomes something of a surfing legend. Both sisters learn to surf, drop out of high school, and end up on completely different life paths. While I was wanting them both to succeed, they made plenty of mistakes along the way.
The last 30% includes their mom’s point of view as well which really shakes things up. From the sister’s point of view, their mother certainly wouldn’t win a mother of the year award. However, Carol’s point of view changed things for me and made me view her differently.
Ultimately, this book kept me engaged the entire way through. This book also offered me so many things I like in a book: a unique setting and time period, alternating points of view, a non-linear timeline, parts to root for the main characters and times to be frustrated with their decisions, and a satisfying conclusion. Just like the author’s other novels, this one did not disappoint!
Thank you to Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine, Melanie Benjamin, and Netgalley for allowing me to read an advanced reader’s copy.