The Names by Florence Knapp
Happy Book Birthday, May 6, 2025
Genre: General Fiction / Domestic Drama
Content Warning: Depictions of domestic abuse. The opening section is particularly heavy, but if you can sit with those early pages, this becomes an incredibly rewarding and beautifully told story.
Format: Digital ARC
Rated: 4.5 ⭐️
Heartbreaking, intimate, and unforgettable!
This book. This book. It reached right into my heart and held on. I finished The Names with a tightness in my chest and tears in my eyes, completely undone by the quiet strength of its characters and the weight of everything left unspoken. Florence Knapp has crafted something incredibly special here, an emotional, layered exploration of identity, choice, and the fragile threads that shape a life.
Told through three alternate realities that branch from a single courageous and pivotal moment, the story unfolds with such tenderness and aching clarity. While Cora’s resilience shapes the path forward, it is truly her son who becomes the emotional centre across all three threads. Watching him grow, shift, and respond to the world around him in each version made the story all the more powerful. There are parts that are difficult, shadowed by pain that lingers quietly, but everything is handled with such sensitivity and care. I felt deeply connected to him in every version of his life, and I ached for him in different ways.
The writing is stunning, elegant, and emotionally sharp. Each chapter felt like stepping into a different version of truth, and I was completely swept up in the what-ifs and the ripple effects of a single name. I found myself pausing to reread lines, to sit with them, to let them settle. This is not just a story, it is a reflection on the life we live, the ones we imagine, and the courage it takes to choose ourselves, even in the smallest of ways.
The cover is just as striking, subtle but full of meaning once you have lived the story, and this one will stay with me for a long, long time.
The only reason this is not a full five stars for me is that a few transitions between timelines felt slightly uneven, pulling me out of the moment just enough to notice. Still, it is a remarkable, moving novel that I will not forget.
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for this digital ARC. I recommend The Names with my whole heart.
Sister Read with Brenda!