A body on the beach. An inheritance. A family pulled apart. Bestselling Australian author Fiona Lowe returns with her most engrossing mystery to date, perfect for readers of Liane Moriarty and Sally Hepworth.
CC Cilento's best memories are of spending every summer holiday running wild in and out of the Friend family beach house with her cousins, James, Ollie, Felix and Lily. It's the next best thing to having brothers and sisters. They've continued the summer tradition into adulthood, getting together at the shack with its absolute beach frontage.
But now a bombshell has the four sibling cousins have officially inherited the property - along with an unexpected fifth share to CC. What starts out as the perfect gift, and a way of keeping the family connected forever, quickly devolves into an emotional power struggle. Half of them want to keep the legacy intact, while the others want to sell - and each side will do anything to make it happen. Soon, CC can't tell friend from foe.
When a body is found on the shack's beach, has this family dispute turned deadly?
AN UPDATE ON THE DROWNING Dear Readers, The process of writing a book is long and the book is printed a solid month before the release date. During the time from final proofing to release is about three months. Why am I telling you this? Because I write contemporary fiction about today's modern world and in The Drowning there is an ADHD storyline. When the book was written the information about diagnosis and prescribing in the state of Victoria was accurate. On February 3rd 2026, this changed and 150 Victorian GPs will be able to prescribe ADHD medication. Prior to this it was only psychiatrists who could diagnose and prescribe. So before you leave a review slamming me about not doing due diligence, please know when the book was written it was up-to-date. I have no control over the government changing the system ;- )
So why did I write The Drowning? People fascinate me, as do the machinations of a family. Inheriting a holiday shack on a pristine piece of beach should be a dream come true. However, take five personalities and each person's memories of summer holidays, then add in the different experiences of adulthood where hopes and dreams often clash with reality. It's a recipe for tension.
It's my observation that families no matter how close can fracture over one incident. Love and affection can easily be trumped by resentment, old grudges and financial need. In The Drowning I have explored how one family deals with the gift of a lifetime. Be careful what you wish for!
A complicated family is at the centre of this Australian mystery/drama story. Set on the Victorian coast, we meet the Friend family. As with all families, there is so much to unpack. This is no ordinary family and this is no ordinary story.
Money always changes everything, and the inheritance of the family beachfront holiday home is just the beginning. Greed, power, long hidden family secrets and more all contribute to tearing this family apart. The Drowning shows what people are willing to do for money. It is a slow burning first half, but when it ramps up boy does it get going. When a body washes up at the beach things really get nasty.
I was completely hooked on this book, gobsmacked at some of the choices this so called close family were making. They treated each other so badly, in a need to assert some power and get what they wanted. It was emotional, particularly for me on a personal level.
Fiona Lowe is a fantastic author of complex characters, making them relatable to the reader. One event sparks so much change and that is often what happens in life.
Thank you so much to HQ Insiders for the advanced copy of this book to read. It is also the March book of the month for the Thrillerfluencers Book Club. out now.
The Drowning is the twenty-seventh stand-alone novel by award-winning Australian author, Fiona Lowe. The audio version is narrated by Rebecca Macauley. Since she was five, Cecilia Cilento (CC to everyone except her mum, Anji, when she’s in trouble) has spent the summers and Easters of her childhood with her cousins at the beach shack in coastal Kooramook. An only child, James, Ollie, Lily and Felix Friend were the siblings she never had. Even after she graduated from school, became an adult, went to Uni to train as a doctor, Ollie and Lily would invite her back for weekends and weeks.
Now, a quarter of a century since she first went, they are all back together. CC will soon be at nearby Portland Hospital for a rotation and hopes to stay in the shack. But then, a surprise! Leo Friend, recently-deceased father of the Friend siblings, has named her as a beneficiary in his will: CC owns one fifth of the shack her great-uncle Bert built, the place he specified must stay in the family, the place of such happy times. She’s just as puzzled as her cousins, but overjoyed: now she’s part of the family, won’t need to wait to be invited.
Not everyone, though, is pleased: one of the wives remarks “This is an unexpected windfall for you. A bit of dumb luck that dilutes our inheritance.” It doesn’t take long for her to realise just what a poison chalice this bequest is. Two of the Friend siblings have major plans for the shack, while the other two want to preserve it in all its dilapidated glory.
CC has the deciding vote, and soon feels the pressure from both camps. The cousins she loves are at loggerheads, there are secrets and lies, and she begins to wonder just whom she can trust. A shocking revelation hits them all like a bombshell, and things get even nastier. And then someone drowns.
In the background is Tom Greely, keyboardist and lead singer at Kooramook Pub, first tuba in the town’s brass band, and pharmacist at Portland Hospital. When CC is surrounded by family drama, this sexy man seems to be the voice of reason. But CC isn’t looking for a relationship: life is complicated enough.
Lowe has a marvellous talent for portraying a family with all the associated quirks and crises and jealousies and resentments. She easily evokes her setting with some wonderful descriptive prose; the premise is thought-provoking; her characters feel wholly believable and their dialogue, natural; there’s romance, some great twists, and a nail-biting climax. This is Fiona Lowe at her best. Highly recommended!
⭐️4 Stars⭐️ The Drowning by Fiona Lowe is a gripping family drama mystery that will have you hooked. There’s a body found on the beach and suspenseful family dynamics are put into play in a small town on Victoria’s southwest coast.
The Friend family are the cousins CC used to love spending summer days with at their beach shack for fun times and family gatherings. She was a single child to a single mother so she cherished the special time this gave her with the big family she didn’t have and was the highlight of each summer.
When CC unexpectedly inherits a share of the beach shack along with her four cousins, a couple of them commence legal action challenging the will and start manipulating her. During this time a set of rules around the use of the shack are put into place and CC finds she can’t stay there freely.
An explosive secret is revealed! Family inheritances are an emotional subject and can create unexpected and bitter conflict, but could it turn deadly?
Loved the suspense, a highly immersive read!
Publication Date 24 February 2026 Publisher HQ Fiction AU
I’m was thrilled to be part of The Drowning bookstagram tour hosted by Benson Publicity & Harlequin Australian. Thank you for a copy of the book and having me along.
What an unexpected read! The title and blurb did not do this novel justice. The characters were dynamic and intriguing; keeping the plot flying along. Believable issues, typical manipulations and absolutely grounded in reality - I loved the family drama that underpinned the core concepts.
I did not see the blindsides or red herrings - very clever.
CC Cilento has spent every summer at the Friend family beach shack with her cousins, a tradition that’s carried into adulthood. When the four siblings inherit the property - along with an unexpected fifth share for CC - what seems like a perfect gift turns into a bitter power struggle over whether to keep or sell. And when a body is found on the beach, the family dispute may have turned deadly.
I’ve read a few of Fiona Lowe’s books, and each one explores a distinct theme - she’s so good at choosing them. This time, it’s inheritance. I loved the slowly unfolding family drama with the Friends (and what an ironic surname for the story!). The tension didn’t just sit with the siblings - it naturally extended to their spouses as well, which made everything feel even more real.
Fiona’s books aren’t popcorn thrillers, and this was no exception. She carefully built the character dynamics before letting the suspense snowball into high-stakes, high-action scenes. By the final stretch, I was on the edge of my seat because I genuinely had no idea what would happen to CC. The story packed so many layers in one go and somehow they just worked well.
This is definitely a book best enjoyed going in blind. Just immerse yourself in CC’s reflections as she tries to find her footing, the shifting sibling dynamics within the Friend family, and the murder mystery.
(Thanks to Benson Publicity and Harlequin Australia for a gifted review copy)
- Ughhhh CC was SO irritating! - The discovery of the body took FOREVER to happen - The book is more prominently a family drama rather than a mystery - Family tree was confusing (I listened on audio) - Speaking of audio, the narrator was giving 40s + vibes. I was shocked when I realised CC was much younger - Felt like some of the not so nice behaviours were attributed to mental illness (the sibling’s mother), when not everyone with x diagnosis acts in specific way - The ADHD storyline seemed unnecessary - Tom was cringe - My old high school was mentioned (ew). We definitely did not and do not call it “Casterton Sec”
- I liked the setting as having grown up in South West Vic, I could visualise it really well. I wondered if Kooramook was based on Narrawong - that’s the image I had of it anyway! - Liked the brief inclusion of different relationship dynamics
Nothing inherently bad about the book, I just did not get along with CC
I really wanted to like this book and was looking forward to reading it. But I must say to me it was a bit lacklustre. The story of family, secrets, lies and of course the drowning....
Having said that it took quite some time to get to the drowning (page 201 to be exact) and there really was no excitement or thrills (if you could call it that) until about page342. The story dragged on and I found CC rather annoying. Some of the language I didn't quite understand, the author tried to add differing social concerns and problems into the story but it didn't flow well, didn't work for me and I found it all rather predictable and somewhat boring.
Big thanks to Harlequin for sending us a copy to read and review. The memories, bonds made and endless summer days are golden when remembering childhood and school breaks. These are shattered once you enter young adulthood and new priorities, directions and traits define your values. CC and her cousins discover how life can brutally sever links to a bygone happiness. An inheritance leaves the family beachside shack to the four cousins and CC. On the surface it was a green light to use the place for those family gatherings and fun times. The ugliness and greed of some was determined to derail this and create chasms between loved ones and erode sentimentality. A washed up body changes dynamics and alliances form as the truth tries to emerge in a dangerous and tense way. The essence of understanding social cohesion and dysfunction between cast members and strong character development is consistently delivered in all Fiona’s books. This family saga component was then upstaged by the drowning and enmeshed twists made it feel like two genres were rolled into one. Tension and intrigue offset a sad reality that inheritance can bring out the worst in people.
This book is a slow burn that I would best describe as a drama thriller. It is heavy on relationship rifts and does take a while to kick off. Through each chapter you get a solid picture of the importance of this place and setting that connects these people and tests their relationships.
As the book gets further along, you are desperate to find out who is telling the truth and what is happening! While I wish the action would have started slightly sooner, I still found this pretty addictive and the last 1/4 I couldn't put down.
Family, secrets and betrayal - The Drowning is definitely a book that you pick up when you need to sink your teeth into a plot that slowly unfolds with a few shocks along the way.
I received a copy of The Drowning from Harlequin Australia in anticipation of the release and SM book tour.
This book brought back some memories of days spent with cousins at a shack built by my great grandfather on the south coast of NSW. A mix of lazy days, busy days, and time spent with a mix of outdoor pursuits and indoor fun. Summers were never long enough.
It’s with these feelings the MC CC returns to Portland (SW Victoria, Australia) to spend time with her four cousins after the death of a family member. The death sees the cousins inherit a shack and so begins the story.
The book takes a little time to lay out the players and set the scene; it’s some way through that THE drowning actually happens. Once it does, the pace picks up considerably and the slow pulling of the threads of this family, quickly begin to unravel. It’s one of those how well do you know your family dynamics, and a sense of keeping your friends close and your enemies closer.
CC for mind is a tad chaotic which serves to form the basis of her struggle at times. This aspect is weaponised against her despite her profession as a doctor, as the story unfolds, chipping away at her confidence; making her question thoughts, feelings and relationships. This isn’t so much about the investigation though there is a police presence, but it’s everything beyond the investigation with some romance sprinkled in the mix.
Review on an advanced copy received from the Publisher.
I couldn’t wait to read this book and was rewarded as I simply could not put it down! I wasn’t expecting the reveal at the end!! The complex story of family dynamics and inheritance swirls around a story of wanting to belong and a raw look at life!
The Drowning was my first Fiona Lowe novel — but definitely not my last
Family can be complicated, layered with all kinds of emotions. CC Cilento has always cherished the holidays spent with her cousins at the family beach house. When she suddenly learns she has inherited a share of it alongside James, Ollie, Felix, and Lily, her long-held dream of being more than just a visitor finally seems within reach.
But not all of her cousins are as thrilled, some long-buried family secrets begin to surface. Who can she trust? Is it jealousy, greed or something else altogether?
I thoroughly enjoyed my first book by Fiona Lowe. Although it takes a while to get to the event hinted at in the title, that time is well spent getting to know the characters. The family tree at the beginning of the book was helpful — though once I’d met everyone, I only needed to glance at it once more to confirm relationships. As the tension built, I kept guessing who the victim might be. I settled on one possibility, discarded it a few pages later, and was still completely surprised when the ultimate truth was revealed — just as I was starting to suspect something and someone else.
With family tension, manipulation, a touch of romance, a cute dog, plenty of twists and turns, and heaps of drama, this book kept me engaged throughout. I also loved the coastal setting and the small-town dynamics, which added even more depth to the story.
Thank you to Harlequin and Harper Collins Australia for providing me an Advanced Reading Copy as part of their HQ Insiders programme. I really appreciate it. The book was a gift in exchange for an honest review.
This was my first Fiona Lowe novel — though I do have her 2023 release The Money Club sitting on my shelf — and it definitely won’t be my last.
I consumed this entirely as an audiobook during a long drive, and the timing couldn’t have been more perfect. I started it as I pulled out of my driveway and finished it literally two minutes from home on the return trip. Safe to say this one had me completely hooked.
I also love when an Australian story is narrated by an Australian narrator. It just adds another layer of authenticity to the setting and characters, and it really helped bring the coastal community of Kooramook to life.
At the centre of the story is CC Cilento and the complicated dynamics of the Friend family, whose long-standing holiday tradition at their beach shack is thrown into turmoil when an inheritance suddenly changes everything.
What begins as a nostalgic return to a place filled with childhood memories slowly unravels into something much more complicated as family tensions, old resentments and long-buried secrets start to surface.
This is a layered story that blends family drama with a steadily building mystery. The first half takes its time establishing the characters and relationships, but that groundwork really pays off once the tension ramps up and the twists begin to land. Several genuinely caught me off guard.
Engrossing, layered and full of unexpected turns, this one kept me completely invested from start to finish.
Total bore. As a thriller/mystery it was mediocre. As a romance it was poorly written and mediocre. Wayyy toooo slow and long. Didn’t care about any of the characters and many unnecessary characters and too much brass band nonsense for no reason. The actual Drowning doesn’t happen until half way through the book. AND the female narrator kept swallowing audibly 🤮🤢 and her male voices were just weird and distracting.
Different family dynamics to the usual family drama. Beach house, holiday memories, a drowning with undercurrents of manipulation, mental illness & a dash of cops and medical drama. This book has everything.
What happens when a shared inheritance tears a family apart?
The Drowning follows CC Cilento, whose childhood summers were spent at a beloved beach shack with her cousins, the Friend siblings. When the property is unexpectedly left to them all—CC included—it should have been a gift that keeps the family connected. Instead, the inheritance ignites tensions over whether to keep or sell the shack, exposing long-buried resentments. As the conflict escalates, a body is discovered on the beach… and suddenly the stakes are much higher than a family disagreement.
The character development here is superb. You get to know each character so well—they’re multilayered and complex—and you understand the family dynamics long before the big reveal happens. There’s a sense that something is simmering just below the surface the entire time, slowly building the suspense. I constantly found myself questioning everyone’s motives… Who’s lying? Who’s manipulating who?
And then—bam. When all hell breaks loose, the story becomes a high-stakes fight for survival.
You could almost split this book into two genres. The first half reads more like contemporary fiction, digging deep into relationships and family tensions, while the second half shifts gears into a brilliant psychological thriller.
It’s also incredibly immersive and atmospheric—it genuinely feels like you can smell the ocean through the pages.
What a page-turner!
I’m so grateful to @harlequinaus and @benson_publicity for having me on this book tour, but mostly for putting @fionaloweaustralianauthor on my radar. This was my first book by this author, but it definitely won’t be my last—I’ll absolutely be diving into her backlist.
For as long as she can remember, CC has spent Summer with her cousins, the Friend family at their beloved beach shack. This beautiful tradition continues on into adulthood but things change when the siblings and CC inherit the property. Everyone is surprised at the news of CCs share of the inheritance, and what should have been a wonderful gift to celebrate becomes a nightmare which uncovers secrets and deceit.
CC is thrown into despair and the family she once loved and desperate to be a part of is ripped apart. Who is left to trust when the people she trusted the most has let her down?
Fiona’s writing is captivating and well thought out. Family issues are raised and the cracks start to show in the first part of the story, with the intensity picking up after the drowning incident. Here, Fiona leaves readers second guessing themselves and trying to figure out who the culprit is.
If you are after a multi layered family drama then this book is for you.
Thank you @benson_publicity and @harlequinaus for the copy of the book and the opportunity to take part in this amazing book tour.
If you like family drama with a strong focus on complicated relationships and power struggles then you will love this one.
CC Cilento grew up spending summer's at her cousin's family's shack on the Victorian coast. As an only child she cherished the time spent with her cousins James, Felix, Ollie and Lily. The four cousins have recently inherited the beach shack with a surprise 5th share going to CC. Not everyone is happy at sharing their inheritance though and some want to sell the shack while others want to keep it. Legal battles and dirty tactics ensue and then a body washes up on the beach. It's clear no one in the family can be trusted, how far will they each go to get what they want?
This one was a slow burn and then it exploded and I raced to the finish! I enjoyed the exploration of the power money has over people. I always think family and money shouldn't mix and this story is exactly why 😅 I live in Geelong, My Dad lives in Portland and My Mum and Dad grew up in Hamilton, all of them are settings in the book so it was fun to see them mentioned.
This book has been chosen for discussion at an upcoming book club. It was a pleasant, easy and engaging read but there was a certain familiarity and predictability with its structure on keeping with other Fiona Lowe novels I have read. That familiarity may have influenced my reaction and rating. 3.5 is more than fair but I hesitate to go higher in that I may be rewarding the enjoyment of a good read rather than its literary qualities. The Accident and The Money Club were both entertaining reads but I now think there is a predictability of structure, style and format that have become less intriguing as one reads subsequent accounts.
Adored this story of generational secrets and lies, dysfunctional family dynamics and slow burn romance. Read the last 40% in one big gulp - because I HAD to know - and it wasn't who I thought. Masterful writing, Fiona Lowe.
Found that the focus on the family relationship struggles and back and forth relationships, made the whole plot quite lacklustre. Found the turn towards the end rather predictable. Only normal person was Tom tbh.
I love all Fiona Lowe's books. I wasn't enjoying our main character, CC, in the beginning of this book. I did slowly come around to her. The plot moves along quickly with lots of twists and turns.