A compelling tale of modern family life - Watching her beloved sister Diana die, Maggie Day ponders the complex ties that bind the five Barton girls, now middle-aged women. A deathbed slip-of-the-tongue raises unanswered questions, and Maggie determines to uncover the truth about her family, at the same time as confronting the shock of being a newly-abandoned wife and the everyday needs of her son, a father at just nineteen . . .
Rebecca Gregson is a former BBC and newspaper journalist. She lives in Cornwall with her husband and two children. Her bestselling debut Katherine's Wheel and Zebras Crossing are also available from Pocket Books....
I was very wrong with my first impression of this book that I picked off the library shelf. The cover was in bright primary colours, with Lowry like figures, and the style of the blurb led me to expect a feisty tale of how 50 year old Maggie, a special needs teacher, coped with divorce, the death of a sister and impending departure of her sons from her home - a kind of older version of chick lit. I was puzzled by the prologue, followed by a chapter which did not seem to link to anything that had gone before, focusing on 19 year old Jamie and his partner, schoolgirl mother Jesse. The realisation of whose son he in fact was came quite late on in the early chapters. It was a far darker novel of family relationships than I first thought and I came close to giving up on it, but I was keen to find out the mystery in the family background, and so did rush through it, perhaps missing some of the nuances. Maggie finally discovered the answer to her need to be needed. The best bit - the portrayal of Jamie with his love for his toddler son Ben. Overall there were sad overtones to the book. I admired the fact that the author tackled a different theme but I cannot say I was drawn into the book, as was promised.