It is officially summer: I read the newest Beatriz Williams book. Because, how can it possibly be summer without that?!?
I am going to jump out here and say that my review is inflated due to my crazy love of Beatriz Williams and that I am wildly entertained by her novels. I don't really know how to describe them:
Contemporary fiction? They take place in the 60's or before so that doesn't really fit.
Romance? Yes, there is usually a romantic storyline but it is not sappy and overwrought.
Suspense? Definitely not even though there is typically a mysterious storyline angle.
I guess the best I can do is that Williams's books are about relationships (parent-child, sisters, friends, husbands and wives), coming into your own, and fighting for what you want in life.
Christina "Tiny" Hardcastle is the perfect wife for rising politician Franklin Hardcastle. She is from an influential New York Family, educated, well-behaved, could give lessons at finishing school, and is classically beautiful. Petite, ivory-skinned, graceful, and slender. Tiny embodies her nickname (really, just a tiny little thing). During the summer of 1966, Frank is making a bid for U.S. Representative and Tiny is spending her time split between campaign obligations in Boston and the family compound on Cape Cod. The anticipated calmness and predictability is upended when Caspian, Frank's cousin and Vietnam war hero, and Pepper, Tiny's younger brash sister, unexpectedly arrive on the Cape for extended stays. Throw in a dash of blackmail, a healthy dose of secrets (really, just tiny little things), and mix in families of the upper echelon along with their expectations and demands and you have a book that I could not put down.
Seriously, I laid (lay? lied?) in bed for two hours past when I should have gone to sleep last night just to listen to the final chapters of my audiobook.
At first, Tiny's character came across as a bit cold and a lot entitled. But, she slowly thawed throughout the story and we saw who she was before entering the Hardcastle family. When she was just Tiny Schuyler, a girl with dreams of dancing and true love. And ambition. There is no denying that Tiny, at least at one point, was solely focused on hitching her wagon to a rising star. Beneath the amicable agreeability and genteel persona was a core of steel. And, I loved seeing that revealed. Pepper was a show stealer. She was brash, progressive, and shameless flirt, and completely unapologetic. She was always first in line to put Tiny in her place. And always first to step up to protect her delicate older sister. Frank was a wonderfully complex character. I started out disliking him for no real reason other than just a bad feeling, came to truly despise him for how he treated Tiny, and then came to have sympathy for him because he was a man trapped between who he was and what society expected of him. And, Caspian. Sigh. He is the misunderstood hero. The quiet source of strength for everyone around him. And a total babe.
I cannot gush enough about how much I adore Williams. Her characters come to life, her writing is smooth and evocative, and her stories strike the right balance of light-hearted summer reads with threads of social and political commentary.
And, the best news? Williams is publishing a Fall novel telling the story of Pepper! It comes out the day before my birthday; thank you for the thoughtful gift Ms. Williams.