Confession: When I picked this book up for book club, I didn’t bother reading the description. I mean, yes, I had read the description at some point in the dim, relatively distant past, but I had forgotten the details. As a result, my eyes bugged out of my head when I got to the second page. Having one of your main characters deliberately shoot a woman coming out of a book shop is hardly the typical opening of a Christian fiction novel, especially one outside the suspense genre. Rebel that I am, I was hooked. And that didn’t change over the pages that followed. Not only was the story intriguing—although I knew who pulled the trigger, I didn’t know who had contracted the kill or why—but it also explored the themes of grace and forgiveness in an unforgettable and challenging way.
The story is told from three perspectives. The first is Henry’s, and despite the horror of what he did in the opening pages, I found myself quickly sympathetic to his situation and the way his life circumstances had shaped him. Musser did a superb job of capturing his voice, and his journey from pulling that trigger to the final pages of the novel was totally absorbing.
The second perspective is Paige, the younger of Josephine’s two daughters. Interestingly, Paige is the only member of her family who has turned away from their faith, having been disillusioned by hypocritical behaviour from respected adults in her life who were professing Christians. At the beginning of the book, we’re told she’s sixteen, but that didn’t register with me until much later in the book, and she read more like a woman in her early- to mid-twenties to me. That aside, I loved the way she tussled with her family’s faith in light of what had happened. There is more I would say if I could, but it’s too difficult to do so without giving spoilers.
The third perspective is Josephine’s, which gives the reader glimpses of her past while she remains in a coma. I won’t say any more about her point of view, again to avoid spoilers, but just sum up this review by saying this story really challenged me and resonated with me. Forgiveness and grace are powerful concepts. As Christians, we can so easily take them for granted when they’re extended to us by God, but how ready are we to offer them to others here on earth? The story also deals with mental health issues—again, something that really resonated with me.
A thoroughly absorbing, intriguing, and powerful read.