Like most reviewers said, there’s not a whole lot you can say about this book outside what you’ve already read in the excerpt, without giving the entire thing away. Even reading that summarization itself gives you a pretty good idea of how the story is going to turn out.
But even if it turns out exactly the way you’d expect it to, I still feel like most readers will walk away from this book feeling a bit disappointed. The uncle/unreliable narrator who takes his nephew in after the accidental (or was it?) death of his parents is just flat out annoying.
Sure, he has obvious reasons to mistrust this kid, given an incident in the past between his youngest daughter, Ingrid (6 at the time, to Matthew’s 12). But it’s certainly not a “cat and mouse game”, as Matthew undoubtedly holds all the cards and Uncle Gil does himself no favors by stalking the kid while he’s doing totally normal teenage stuff.
Gil was just… weird. Why did he have to lust after the girls Matthew was interested in? (One being one of his favorite students at the college he teaches - he basically forced Matthew into letting him come into the city with him, then is somehow surprised when Matthew, a nearly 18-year-old boy, with good looks, intelligence, and money…is horny, and girls are into him? 🤔) but he’s just a CREEP…
”Oh, Professor Duggan,” a voice said, and Gil turned quickly on his stool, nearly fell, just catching himself on the slick stone counter. It was Susie, wearing only a white button up shirt…
… she came up to the counter beside him so he could smell her hair, a faint scent of vanilla, and she rose on tiptoes, shirt riding along her legs, revealing, for an instant, the curve of her butt, her lacy black underwear.”
There’s another time later when he watches them having sex through a window back in VT (until the damn dog ruins it all for him by barking, anyway). And ANOTHER time, with him stalking his nephew back in the City, AGAIN creeping on a high school senior:
”It seemed wrong anyone could be so pretty, much less someone so young. Her thin legs were tucked under her, so her skirt rode up to her waist.
Gil stared at the girl, hiked skirt or no, trying to get her to remember, to focus, TEXT MATTHEW NOW. She shifted her legs so he could see right up to the black triangle of her underwear.”
Wow, and you wonder why he and his wife are growing apart… if he spent as much time with her as he did lusting after young girls and being overly consumed by his nephew’s wealth, they’d have a wonderfully fantastic relationship. I just didn’t care for any of the characters and their naïveté, their obsessions, their arrogances (take your pick).
Oh, and the ending. I don’t even think it’s possible to give it away when I’m not exactly sure what the hell happened (aside from some vague details), I feel a lot of things never really came together as they should have.
This might be a great read for a lot of people, but for me, it was an interesting premise that had a lot of potential. Unfortunately, the book ultimately fell short of living up to its potential, not delivering the twists and turns and manipulative games I had anticipated.