Liberty Chapman has a successful, high-flying career, a Porsche, and a House in Hampstead. Her success as a lawyer has bought her many things, but she cannot escape her past. Even her name isn’t her own.
Her boss asks her to travel to Leeds, the son of an important client is in trouble, but Leeds is a part of the life that Liberty has told no one about. The time in care, looking after her mother, her violent father, and three younger siblings, a life heading nowhere fast. She doesn’t want to be reminded of her past, it is not where her future lies, but it is where her present is headed.
The story is well told, set both in 1984, in Liberties childhood, and the present, she relates tales of two different lives, lived by the same person.
The book is both a thriller and a family saga. Liberty meets up with her estranged family and re-connects with them in their dysfunctional present, beset as they are by petty crime, and drug and alcohol addictions.
The crime story that follows the family is both visceral and well-described. Liberty, and Raj Singh, another solicitor, find themselves in the orbit of Brixton Dave and his gang of enforcers.
This is not a story for fans of light fiction, although there are elements of humour and pathos as Liberty reconnects with her family and sees that the place she escaped from still has a strange pull for her.
The book moves at a cracking pace, with three-dimensional, believable characters and a plot that moves logically to a shocking but fitting denouement. Helen Black has spent time as a Lawyer, so the fact that it stands together as a legal story also adds to the book's character. This is not the author’s first book, and the strong sense of story-telling, and believably human central characters, full of pathos, resilience and regret means that this is a story that gives the reader plenty to think about.