I'd like to give this one 3.5 stars.
I am loving re-entering the audio arena. My public library has an amazing (as we all know and appreciate!) amount of choice and variety and given my rather ‘obsessive’ use of Goodreads shelves combined with my cataloguing library background I have quick access to browse and choose from both BorrowBox and my Goodreads shelves. So much choice, and very exciting to be able to choose my next read!
This was yet another different type of read that I’ve experienced as lately I have been dipping into varied reads. I found the narration excellent, flowing and easily absorbed. A very well written book, a debut author whose other books I have just added to my list.
The premise although probably quite common; two newborn children being switched at birth, but in this instance, with different and more far-reaching consequences than expected.
Told from alternating perspectives, three of the parents, and one of the children. This worked well and gave easy insight to the depth of despair and anguish of each.
Sarah and Phill have lived tirelessly for fourteen years caring for their cherished daughter Lauren who suffers from a genetic illness, a disability they have adapted to and have set up a lovely life for their little family which includes older sibling James. They’re lovely parents. Attentive to the needs of their daughter, and aware, in the most part, of keeping their son close to their embrace as well and he in turn, loves his little sister. Added to this nuclear family is an aunt that loves her niece and nephew fiercely, Ally is a character I loved reading about. She added a lot to this story.
Ann is the other parent struggling in this equation, although she is quite noticeably less emotive and is dealing with this on her own as a single mother, her estranged husband an awful man with his own failings as well. There is something noticeable about this woman, she is empty and unable to connect with the daughter raised as her own, a physically healthy young girl named Rosie.
The Rosie we meet as this shocking news is realised prefers the new family she is getting to know, which is in stark contrast to the relationship to her mother she has co-existed with up until now. A fractured relationship at best is what we see from the opening scenes.
Ann’s biological daughter having such a profound disability makes clear her failings and lack of true empathy; she seems to try in her well-meaning if stilted on the surface manner, but these attempts show the unnatural aspect of the sordid affair.
Rosie, a perfect and healthy teenage girl, is a soccer player with the usual teenage surliness and rebellion. She clings tight to the father figure she has missed out on her entire life by forming an almost instant bond with Phil, while keeping Sarah at arm’s length, likewise Sarah shows us her vulnerable uncertainty about this robust and angry teen, whom she carried and birthed. This makes Sarah so very aware of what her adored Lauren is not. She is not regretful, in fact, realises had this tragedy not occurred, the close bonds and tight love existing in their family would have been quite different. She does not feel sorry, but she certainly does feel a fierce protectiveness over her adored Lauren.
Themes in books such as these always raise big questions and as a mother throughout the process, I was wondering what I would do; such a hefty thing to ponder. I did guess a portion of the outcome, but not in its entirety. The bonds of family and the strength of commitment, the tumultuous road to an ending or a beginning. After all, the children come first.