This is the first book I read from the author and it definitely won’t be my last!
This Women’s Fiction book is engaging from the first page until the last. I had a hard time putting it down and I finished it at 2 am, because I needed to know how it was going to end. To say the ending surprised me is an understatement. This story has a lot of unexpected twists that make you want to read more and more.
Isley, Payton and Clara are three best friends that reunite every two years for what they call “friendcation”. Their husbands are included too, plus one of their teenage daughters who goes a bit unwillingly, but will have her own important part in the story. Other that enjoy the vacation, they are take part in the fundraiser event for Finch’s Hope, the NGO that was started in honor of Cece, their fourth best friend who committed suicide during their senior year of high school. The three friends carry deep personal secrets they haven’t disclosed between them and carry their own guilt. Even deeper than their personal secrets, they all carry a burden together that nobody knows. The night Cece died, they were with her hours before she took her life. They kept the secret at first because they were afraid that what they did that day could make the police think they had influenced her decision. More than 20 years have passed and they still hold their secret tight because they fear of hurting Cece’s mother -the founder of the organization that has saved many lives from committing suicide- loves each of them as if they were her own daughters. Add to everything, that while they stay at Isley’s vacation home, a mysterious person breaks in the house in the middle of the night and leaves a strange message that says “say the truth or I will!”. They all are afraid of what truth the person is talking about. Could it be that somebody knows what they did that fateful day? Or could it be directed to their personal secrets one of them carries?
The story touches tough issues like mental illness, suicide, divorce, drug abuse, but I think it was made in a very gentle and respectful -yet still realistic- way. I liked that the book has each of the three women POV, and even goes back in time and tells Cece’s version in first person. The way it changes from third person to first person flows and you barely notice the change.
The characters are complex, have gone and are going through some difficult personal issues in their marriage or family, and the bond they share and how they support each other was inspiring. A friendship that lasts through time and stays intact even if they all have different lives, live in different states, and only see each other every two years. The trust between them seems unwavering, until they each realize that they carry their own problems which they are trying to hide, and the only way to face them in the right way is to share them with your unconditional friends who will always have your back.
I have to admit I kind of expected some of the characters to reach to God, pray and ask for His guidance and provision, as I thought all the Love Inspired books had a faith inspired thread. This is not the case, but I’m not saying this in detriment of the book, because clearly that wasn’t the objective, and this probably makes the book more open to non-believers and it definitely is a wholesome and touching story. But even if there’s not a faith thread, this story is full of moral values told in a natural way: the importance of being truthful, about trust in marriage, about facing reality with humility even if it hurts to admit it to others or even yourself, the value of unconditional friendship and support during good and bad times. The difficulties of parenting are evident and realistic in this story, and I loved how the women tried their best to raise their children, trying not to fall in their dysfunctional parents pattern, yet realizing sooner or later that they too can fail, because nobody is perfect, but what is important is the love and care for their children must experience.
My favorite character was Clara. Her marriage seemed as the most perfect one, yet she also faced communication difficulties with her husband, the struggle with the strain that dire finances can cause in the relationship, etc., but what I loved the most was her caring personality, her empathy, compassion, and her sense of humor (and her husband’s too).
The ending was very good and satisfying, yet unexpected. The way things unraveled at the end felt a bit rushed, but I loved the epilogue!
All in all, a book I recommend. It made me want to read her previous Women’s Fiction book, The Summer of Keeping Secrets.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from the author and was under no obligation to post a positive review. This is my honest and unbiased opinion.