I am a fan of Anne Rivers Siddons and have been steadily moving through her arsenal of twenty four books, often times wondering which book to read next. When a friend recommended "Outer Banks," I bought it sight unseen, thinking anything Siddons writes will be good. "Outer Banks" is yet again another of Siddons' captivating reads. Its first person narrative from the voice of a woman, now in her early fifties, as she reflects on the people involved in the most pivotal phase of her life is resplendent with the kind of poignancy we all can relate to. It is a story that begins in college, where the narrator comes to a small Southern college and is befriended by a group of girls that leave an indelible mark. In the midst of this circle enters Paul Sibley, a slightly older, mysteriously handsome and rather exotic architectural student, who is a standout amidst this staid environment, and who overwhelms the narrator as they enter into a relationship that begins in ecstasy and ends with a wound that never heals. But life carries on, with its scars of disillusionment and betrayal, and although the narrator agrees to a reunion with the players involved in what we learn is her life's painful turning point, "Outer Banks" is a full-circle story with an uncanny resolution. Populated with singular and fully developed characters in a well-rounded group of friends, the reader comes to know each character intimately. We know their backgrounds, their motivations, their unique personalities and their hidden fears. As the setting, Outer Banks, North Carolina is the location of the vacation home of one in this group of friends. It is its own character; this vast, desolate beach terrain, where an opulent beach-side mansion hovers over the crashing waves in an area that feels like the dark side of the moon. It is within these walls that the characters revisit the dynamic set in play thirty years earlier. Though time has evolved, their way of relating to each other has not, and deep seated resentments come to the fore in a manner that provides eventual redress. This book has an ending I can only describe as utter fantastic, and I use this word in the truest sense of its meaning. It verges on gothic in its surreal, dramatic urgency. It frightens and shifts and catches the reader unaware. I recommend this book for its brilliant story development and because Siddons wrote the kind of characters one never forgets.