Rebecca thinks the past is behind her. She has spent the last ten years working as a lawyer at an insurance firm in London, but she’s unfulfilled in her job, and her boyfriend, the one she didn’t even care about, has just dumped her. And then comes an email from Hannah, the sister she hasn’t spoken to in a decade. On the surface, Hannah has it all. A perfect house, a high-flying husband, an adorable daughter. But the facade is crumbling. Forced to reunite with Rebecca when they jointly inherit their grandmother’s clifftop house in Bondi, Hannah is reminded of the life she gave up all those years ago. Over two weeks, everything the sisters think they know about each other changes forever. With fierce and complicated family dynamics and a suspenseful edge, What Is Left For Us will have you switching and dividing allegiances until the last page.
I was ENTHRALLED the whole way through! We follow two estranged sisters, who are brought back together to sort out their childhood home in Bondi. It's a gripping and emotional read about reckoning with the past, the cost and pain of keeping secrets and what it means to return home. Well paced, with razor-sharp and well layered characterisation made me fly through this one!
One of the most beautiful books I've read about sisters, family, and the quiet ways we're shaped by the people we grow up with. I don't think I've ever moved through a book this quickly, I was completely immersed and genuinely a bit sad that I finished it.
Every character carried something relatable, and the author has an incredible ability to bring unspoken emotions to the surface, those we've sensed but never quite able to articulate.
As someone with a sister and a life largely shaped by my family, this story felt especially personal and meaningful.
i'd call this a soap opera, but those are generally entertaining and this was not.
the protagonists feel like hallmark movie stock characters - the high powered business woman in the big city, and the submissive suburban house wife. no one in this book acts like a real person. i kept waiting for the tropes to be subverted in an interesting way, but they never were. the huge betrayal that was set up was disappointing too: they were just into the most mid man you could ever imagine and can't communicate to save their lives. joy.
there were multiple moments that made me feel gross. a woman in her thirties complimented another woman in her thirties by saying she looked like a nineteen year old - yuck. there are multiple moments where women are really judgemental and mean to each other, and its treated like normal behaviour. i kept waiting for this to be flipped into a critique or challenged in any way, but that never came.
the prose is also very clunky. people say 'show don't tell' and neglect to say the worse thing you can do is both simultaneously. scenes will be shown, often nicely, then instead of letting us read between the lines, it is the awkwardly explain, as if readers can't put 2 and 2 together.
for positives, i guess the setting is well developed and the themes are well intentioned. i thought the car crash and flooding were impactful story beats too, but most of the book drags.
there are a lot of books out there like this but actually good, so I'd give this a miss. its not terrible, but its not worth reading. you might be better off reading Suits fanfiction
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Disclaimer - This isn’t the type of book I usually read and the book was recommended to me by a work colleague who happens to be the author’s husband. I picked this up and related to the character of Rebecca straight away. I recognise this character, with her workaholic nature and boring life. I don’t relate to Hannah but I recognise her as well, all surfaces and perfection and beige. I have frequently wondered how these people love their lives and now I have the answer - unhappily. I found the story addictively page turning and an easy read. I wished there had been a little more depth in some of the other characters (what was Nan like? What about mum? Was Max really that shallow?) but I was engaged all the way through to the fairly satisfying ending. Great debut by Sophie Stern.
What Is Left For Us is an emotionally charged novel by Sophie Stern, exploring the fractured bond between sisters Rebecca and Hannah.
Ten years ago, Rebecca abruptly left Bondi for London, leaving behind more than just her home—she left Hannah with questions that were never answered.
Now, an unexpected email forces Rebecca to return. Their grandmother’s clifftop home has been left to them both, and settling the estate means facing each other again.
But the house holds more than memories. As old tensions resurface and long-buried truths begin to unravel, Rebecca and Hannah must confront the past that tore them apart.
A gripping and deeply moving story of sisterhood, loss, and the fragile ties that bind us—What Is Left For Us asks: how do you rebuild a relationship when so much has been left unsaid?
What a wonderful book - I was taken to Bondi with such lush and specific description that, even though I'd never been there, the neighbourhoods were brought to life through the eyes of Rebecca and Hannah - two sisters who see-sawed between love, resentment, jealousy and misunderstanding. Every character - major or minor, bricks and mortar - sang off the page, with the two sisters always at the epicentre. Relationships are real: warm and beautiful in their complexity and depth. You never quite know who you are rooting for throughout - sometimes one sister, sometimes the other - until the end, when you realise you were rooting for them both, just in different ways! Highly recommended!
Super engaging book with beautiful writing all the way through. I loved the story and the themes it explored, and the characters only added to it. I’m usually not a fan of booked based in Australia but I loved this one and the little descriptions it mentioned which I could visualise with ease due to relatability.
Love love loved this debut! The nuances of family dynamics are so beautifully portrayed and the sister characters wonderfully written. The settings are fabulous, too! Highly recommend this one 🙏💕
This really was a surprise read from an Australian author. Really enjoyed it. Very well written, it flowed really well and was quite riveting. Unexpected storyline twist too.
A family saga set in Bondi Australia. Lots of heart. Humour. Twists and turns. I was compelled from the first page and enjoyed every part of this book.
Nice easy read - loved the descriptions of Bondi and the sisters relationship - but the story finished too early for me - there was lots more to be told.