The High Tide Club is a story about friendship and the great lengths people will go for their true friends.
Brooke Trappnell, a young attorney and single mom to 3-year old Henry, receives a call regarding an unspecified legal matter from the well-known, Josephine Bettendorf Warwick, of Talisa, an island off the coast of Georgia. Brooke visits 99-year old Josephine who is ill and wants to preserve her home and property in Talisa, as well as make amends with her three friends: Millie, Ruth, and Varina.
Together, back in the early 1940s, the foursome dubbed themselves The High Tide Club, skinny dipping on nights with a full moon. Since then, they mostly lost touch and grew apart, letting differences get the best of their friendships.
Brooke tries to sort out matters related to Josephine’s estate and track down the other women, or in some cases, their relatives. In the process, old mysteries resurface, new friendships are formed, and Brooke attempts to balance this with motherhood, family matters, and her own love life.
The High Tide Club is a good story and I was curious to see how things would play out, predicting some elements correctly, but there were others I was not expecting. Even with the predictable elements, I for the most part, enjoyed the book, but there were definitely parts that dragged on. It did, at multiple points, feel long. This was my first read by Mary Kay Andrews and it’s clear she can write a solid, southern story.