This is a short, but moving, novel about an evening at the Palm Room at the Ritz in 1925, when the people at two tables become aware of each other. At one is Bruce J Ismay and his daughter Evelyn. At the other are Mr and Mrs Grimsden, their daughter Miranda and the young man she is to marry. Thirteen years ago Mrs Grimsden and her daughter Miranda, who was only ten at the time, were first class passengers on Titanic's maiden voyage.
Told from the point of view of Miranda, Evelyn and Bruce Ismay, the novel flashbacks over the past, to "the knot at the centre of all their lives". This is a story of acceptance, shame, forgiveness and responsibility. Although, at first, the two tables become aware of each other with part shock and part embarrassment, the end of the evening will change many of their point of views about what happened on that fateful night which has stayed with them all. I was pleasantly surprised by this book, which has taken a real character in Mr Ismay and given him a voice. If you are interested in reading more about what happened to Mr Ismay, you might enjoy How to Survive the Titanic or The Sinking of J. Bruce Ismay.