May settled. She married Fred who runs her father's grocery business in Sacramento. She's always been the 'spare'...her sister June was always prettier, smarter, more vibrant. After receiving a letter from June, who had been missing for over a year, May leaves Fred behind to meet her sister at an artist colony in Southern California.
May arrives and is instantly in awe of the wealth of the colony. The mansion is full of luxury and beautiful things, including a pet lion. Rex and Ruth are the married couple who run the colony/cult. June, however, is nowhere to be found. May is instantly drawn into the folds of the community. They promise to provide what was once lost. In May's case, it was her daughter who died soon after birth.
May is sent on a small mission, which later leads to an angry husband of another colony member showing up, drunk and screaming. Soon after, that man is dead. And so is May's husband.
May continues to wait for June and digs around the colony's inner workings, finding dark secrets and parlor tricks. The longer she stays, the more she wants to leave. But May will not leave without June, no matter what.
Kelsey James did an excellent job of creating the seaside atmosphere and of May's inner thoughts and desires. May wanted to be taken seriously. She wanted to turn her ideas for the grocery store into reality but settled for what was acceptable at the time. It's a good characterization of women during the 1930s.
I did find some things odd about the story - the 1930s are famously known as The Great Depression and Prohibition. So the gas usage of the cars stood out. (Maybe I think too much?) Also, a LION?? What does this lion eat? Where does it sleep? WHERE DOES IT GO TO THE BATHROOM????
Still, the overall story was great and the end was satisfying. May really came into her own and found the happiness she desperately needed.
Thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for the opportunity to read and review this book.