3.5 stars this time. I'm a fan of this author, but have mixed feelings about this one. I found it gripping, and unlike other reviewers, I did like the protagonist, Hilary. She is a single (divorced) mother with an autistic son (Asperger's syndrome) who at times has violent fantasies. She was gutsy, with the mother-bear instinct about her son, loving him unconditionally. I could see why she was tempted to keep the money she found, based on her circumstances. She did try hard to get help from her ex but realized it would cost her money and time to prosecute him for it, neither of which she had. Anyone who's ever been in desperate need could relate to the decision she made, and good fiction is what made for the rest of the story.
However, I did find this a bit disjointed. It opens with a scene written in italics, which is like a prologue, but isn't labeled as such, yet presents itself as one. Then it goes onto chapter 1, titled "Hilary" and proceeds to tell us about her current financial straits. A few chapters later, we are reading again about this woman dealing with her disturbed son, and some of the awful things that he has done, including a near drowning in a bathtub scene, and we assume this is still Hilary... talking about this same son with Asperger's syndrome, but it took me several more chapters to figure out that it's not ~~ it is another mother ~~ at another time, way in the past. I didn't notice the italics, which should have been my clue. When you're reading late at night, like I always do, those things can get by you. The chapter was not titled with anyone's name, like some of the others were, which is quite helpful. In all fairness, I should mention my copy is an ARC, so it may differ in format from the final published version.
The action got pretty convoluted, I must admit. Good people dying, twists and turns. One thing perplexed me, at the end, and I'll chose my words carefully so as not to add a spoiler (I don't say who the bad guy is) but when Hilary tore up those pages and threw them in the ocean, one asks yourself, "weren't they needed as evidence to prove what the bad guy had done? Surely people wondered what happened to him, didn't they? What explanation did they get for what happened ~~ and why weren't we privy to all that?"
As an added thought, because the phrase "The Other Side of the Road" was used in this novel at appropriate times, this might have been a good title for this work. Thanks again to Amazon for providing me with an pre-release copy of this work for my honest, unbiased review.