The beginning of the book is very good, so I trusted it would be really interesting. But trust can bring a lot of false hope...
First of all, what is the theme of the book? It seems that difficult family relationships. How often it turns out that we know very little about our sister or mother? I think very often. They seem more like strangers. Relative strangers. So, up to this moment, it was fine. The main character is Grace. Years ago she promised her dying sister, Hope, that she would look after her little boy. Now, the biological father of the boy has turned up on Grace’s operating table, and with him the nightmares of the past returned. Based on what her sister told her, Grace believed that she had done the right thing to keep that promise. But now she is not so sure anymore. So she starts to investigate to find the truth in too many lies.
The author unnecessarily decided to touch on more than one issue. Also, she presents the stories of Hope, her mother and partner, his mother and his half-brother from one point of view only - the main character, the narrator of the novel. As a result, the pages of the book are filled with conjecturing, which would be more appropriate for some investigating detective. In my opinion, the book is simply "over-salted". Too many complex human problems make the story unreliable. All characters had fallen on extremely hard times that it gets comical, not scary or sad. The only thing missing is... well, there's probably nothing missing. We have deadly disease and severe illness, sexual abuse, lies, betrayal, evil, jealousy, cold mothers and their indifference to the harm of their children, unresolved regrets, murder, and a drug problem. And it's all told by one person. Something didn't work out here.
Thanks to Netgalley for providing a free copy in exchange for an honest review.