I actually loved how the book started with a trial, and we're not even sure what led up to it aside from a murder. Fourteen years later, we are following Lizzie's life... Lizzie who lost her sister, Megan, all those years ago. It is clear that she believes that the man who killed her sister is Joe, an old friend of the family who is now getting out of jail. Lizzie decides to get revenge on Joe, but I have a feeling that Joe didn't kill her sister, and I feel horrible that he not only sat in jail as an innocent man for fourteen years, but that she's decided to make his life miserable now that he's out. I have my suspicions about who killed Megan, and I believe every reader has the same suspicions. The whole story line drags on, and I can't help but wonder why Joe doesn't even recognize Lizzie or remember that Megan had a sister named Lizzie. He never questions her and eventually starts to fall in love with her.
It is interesting to see how childhood experiences and events shape a person's life though, from personality to career.
I liked the ending because they had me believing something in the end that wasn't true. While I didn't predict the ending, the book was boring in general and I didn't enjoy it as much as I thought I would.
"You sometimes have to look at things from a different angle," Ellen said, "in order to fully understand" (page 260).