3.5 stars. I was left feeling a bit miffed and mystified by this book. The prologue, which is set 'now', goes out of its way to make it seem like there's a Huge Event later in the book at the launch of an exclusive jewelry collection. I can't be the only one whose mind went straight to thinking someone gets killed when the lights go out, or some very expensive jewelry is stolen. Okay, so I'm intrigued enough to go with it when the book then goes back 30 years into the past to talk about a woman trying to make her own way in Dublin in the 80s. For the most part I liked Lola and enjoyed her story, then as Bey was born and grew up I enjoyed following the events of her life as well. The book picks up enormously in the middle section about the awful Christmas spent with the Warrens. But for me that stuff in the middle was the highlight because after that it was all jewelry this and gemstones that and short term relationships this and will I ever by happy? that, and then finally we get to the Fateful Night that was hinted at in the prologue and we discover nothing really happens at all when the lights go out. Really. Abso-freakin-lutely nothing. This felt almost like a betrayal after all the hints that were dropped about Bey thinking she was a Bad Person, and her being accused of jewel thievery (simply for picking up a ring that her half sister clearly said she didn't want...way to over dramatize). I seriously thought she might have a secret identity as an international jewel thief (actually that's a great idea for a book), but no. Just a book about a woman and her life and relationships, which is fine, if I'd known that's what it was going in, instead of being lead astray by a prologue that hinted at criminal intrigue.
Boy.
This author's writing style though, is good. I liked the settings and the characters (when they weren't self-flagellating about every minor infringement they ever made). I think maybe this particular book just irked me because of the reasons I said (and also I'm not a jewelry fan so that didn't help. I do think jewelry is pointless and a rather disgusting display of consumption at times. All I could think when Wil was talking about sourcing his gems was 'how do we know these aren't blood diamonds by the way?' lol. Maybe my mind just goes to dark places, but seriously. A book that focusses this intensely on jewelry and jewelry making with diamonds specifically, should have had some discussion about how people suffer and die in Africa for no good reason other than rich people like the way they shine...but like I said. My mind = a dark, dark place at times and that was clearly not the reason for this book). I might enjoy something else by O'Flanagan if I know it's just going to be meandering stuff about relationships and nothing else. I liked that her female characters were independent and strong, they never let a man walk all over them (and many tried). I liked a lot about it. I just felt cheated by a prologue that lead me to believe the book was something it wasn't.