As sisters, Lauren and Jenna have always had a very tight bond. Now Lauren lives in London with her husband Ed and 16-year old daughter, Mack. Jenna and her husband Greg are still on Martha's Vineyard where she grew up, trying, and struggling to have a baby. Both sisters have a difficult with relationship with their mother, Alice. When circumstances quickly change, they all find themselves on Martha's Vineyard, where secrets come out and the women have to figure out how to start anew.
This is a difficult review to write, as I think many people will enjoy this book, but it wasn't for me. It started out slow then picked up toward the middle, but when all of the secrets came out early on (and those that hadn't I had figured out), I wondered what was going to fill the rest of the book! There is a lot of dialogue between the sisters, their mother, and Mack. A lot of telling rather than showing. I found Mack's character in particular to be unrealistic. I don't know any teenager that makes a general statement about being a teenager in almost every conversation. Some of the reactions of characters to events were difficult to connect with for me, and I think this could have been improved with more emotion or characterization.
That said, this is an easy read, that is fairly quick to get through. It involves topics that are very relevant to most women-marriage, sisterhood, the mother-daughter relationship- and tackles these with these with themes of strength, resilience, and forgiveness. If you are typically a romance fan, I'd suggest giving this one a shot, as you might enjoy it more than I did!
Thank you to the Harlequin publicity team for sending me a copy!