Her Last Holiday was my fourth read by CL Taylor, and my least favourite.
Nearly three years ago, a wellness retreat on the Mediterranean island of Gozo ended in tragedy – with two people dead, and one missing, and the face of @soulshrink, motivational speaker/self-help guru Tom Wade being charged with gross negligence.
It’s now been nine months since Tom was released from jail, after serving a two-year sentence, and his wife Kate (who looks after the business side of @soulshrink) has a new plan to relaunch the brand and get their lives back on track. She’s organised another retreat, this time at a large estate in the Welsh Valley.
Geraldine Fitzgerald, the grieving mother of Jenna (the woman who went missing at the Gozo retreat) has never gotten over not knowing what happened to her daughter, and is sure that Tom holds the key to the truth. To find much needed answers, she convinces her eldest daughter, Fran, to enrol in the retreat.
Truthfully, the synopsis of this one never really grabbed me, I only requested it because CL Taylor’s name was on it, and I was convinced it was going to be better than it sounded. And I was worried when I struggled to make it through the first half due to the slow, boring pace that I had made the wrong choice. Thankfully, the last half was better, and I did quite like the ending. It wasn’t amazing, but I would place it in the above average category. Okay, so maybe the plot was a bit outlandish, but at least I didn’t guess it! The only thing I could’ve done without was the huge info dump in the second to last chapter.
The format followed the familiar NOW (Fran and Kate) and THEN (Jenna) narration, with chapters cycling through the three POV’s. I really enjoyed Fran’s personality and familial hang-ups, but failed to connect with any of the other character’s. Kate’s POV seemed unnecessary, and quickly grew redundant and repetitive. And, what was up with all the ‘slapping’ nonsense? I also felt two characters underwent complete personality transplants. Other character’s were just so bland that I failed to understand why they were included. FYI, those group activities seemed kind of risky too? I also wish it would’ve had more of a gothic horror tone, given the isolated nature of both settings, but at no point was I creeped out.
An average read overall, but there was just nothing unique enough to make it stand out from every other domestic noir.
I’d like to thank Netgalley, Avon Books UK, and CL Taylor for the e-ARC.