Chandler Baker has written an unflinching must read novel for our times, for every generation of women and girls of a family and perhaps, even more pertinent, for every man and boy to read. In this story, we are immersed into our #MeToo contemporary world, set in Dallas, and the Truviv corporation, and its power structures, politics and culture. Four women, Ardie, Sloane and Grace, in house lawyers in the department of North American Legal Affairs, and cleaner Rosalita, a single mom with young son, Saloman, have worked for the company for years. Their world is rocked when the current CEO, Desmond Bankole dies suddenly, leaving a vacuum at the top, there are whispers that their boss, the General Counsel, Ames Garrett, is the man most likely to succeed as CEO. Perturbed by this possibility and the entry of a new woman into the department, Katherine Bell and her experiences, the women embark on a series of actions that is to have their lives begin to catastrophically unravel after a death.
Interwoven into the narrative are snippets of depositions, cross-examinations, and police interviews. Circulating below the radar in Dallas are rumours of a online network list compiled by women for women of men to beware of. Having put up with the arrogant Ames, a manipulative and underhand man, the women have finally reached the point where enough is enough. They are a close knit group of women, flawed, but supportive of each other, although their relationships with each other do experience the occasional bad patch. Sloane's young socially awkward daughter, Abigail, is being bullied at school and on social media, and Abigail's treatment by senior staff at her school outlines just how differently girls are treated in comparison to boys. When it comes to protecting her daughter, Sloane is a fierce and formidable force of nature. The police entertain and probe the possibility that a death is murder, and the women find themselves facing a nightmare of a public and corporate PR backlash, one which threatens to destroy and impoverish them in a twisted tale that includes secrets, sexism, discrimination, harrassment, and sexual abuse.
Baker provides a plethora of rich descriptions and commentary of what women face in corporate environments, a chorus of voices based on real life facts, the whole shebang of real life horrors. Then there are the details of what happens to a woman's body and mental health after giving birth through the character of Grace. There will be recognition of much of what is laid out in the narrative, it is disturbing just how much of it will resonate, mitigated only slightly by the support found in other courageous women. Baker does not shy away from the reality of how some women can make an unbearable situation experienced by other women so much worse. Perhaps the scariest and most unsettling aspect is laid out in just how early negative experiences can be embedded in women with the portrayal of young Abigail's treatment by her school. This is a smart, thought provoking, and uneasy read, celebrating women's supportive friends and networks, the problems they face negotiating the minefield that is corporate culture and the men that would exploit and take advantage of them. A brilliant and relevant read, part thriller, that additionally outlines the impossible pressures society, corporations and women put on themselves to be perfect, without a doubt this is a book that I recommend highly. Many thanks to Little, Brown for an ARC.