I was put off big-time by the predictability of this book. There's a kind of shallow transparency about it that meant I got there way early and had to wade and slog through all the angst, secrecy, and instability before the book caught up to me. Diana and Marnie are sisters who grew up with a mentally unstable mother. Some years after dear old Dad took a powder and lit out for a more stable relationship, Mom loads the girls into a sailboat for a little late-night sailing during the height of a storm. Predictably enough, the little trio get a late-night swim forced on them, and Mom's body is never found. Meanwhile, the two sisters have different memories of that night, and those memories and the secrets inherent with them pull the two apart.
Fast forward several years: Diana has inherited her mother's artistic ability and mental instability. She takes her son, Gil, out on a boat one stormy night, and the two are nearly killed. Gil clams up and can't speak after the incident, and Diana's ex-husband, Quinn, calls on Marnie, a teacher of special-needs kids, to move home from Arizona where she fled to escape the watery memories of her South Carolina upbringing. He's sure Marnie can help poor Gil.
The truth is, none of these characters lit me up much. Arguably the most interesting one, and my favorite perversely enough, is a woman whom White disparagingly flings off as a heavyset nurse. She stays with the family, feeding the hyper-religious disabled grandpa, presumably cleaning him up and assuming the role of caregiver when all kinds of instability is raging around her.
This has the look and feel of a musty old Phyllis A. Whitney book. It isn't quite as Gothic as an old Whitney would have been, but it is a book replete with references to ghosts, a family curse, and even the sound of crying children, heard by poor Gil, who loses his ability to speak after he nearly loses his life, thanks to dear old Mom.
The audio edition of this will cost you 11 hours and change if you read it at normal speed. Crank it to 2.75X, and you're finished in four hours and change, and that's about all the time you want to spend with this.