Isabelle Manning, daughter of Great American Novelist Ward Manning, wants nothing more than to be a writer. But her first book was rejected by numerous publishers, and as she turns 35, she’s beginning to realize that it may be time to give up on her dream. And then, in the wake of her mother’s death, Isabelle discovers a shocking secret that calls into question everything she thought she knew about her family, sending her life on a trajectory she never imagined.
Unfolding on multiple timelines from the perspectives of four characters (Isabelle, her mother Claire, her friend Brian, and Ward) and utilizing a book-within-a-book structure, A Likely Story is a complex, intimate family drama. Through her well-crafted characters, Leigh McMullan Abramson explores topics like grief, privilege, misogyny, prejudice, ambition, reputation, rivalry, and complicated relationships of all kinds. She doesn’t exactly cover new territory with her plot, but even though I had a good idea of where the book was headed, I still enjoyed how Abramson executed it – specifically with the inclusion of the unattributed manuscript, which provided so much texture and richness to the narrative.
The strength of this book, really, is the characters, who are complex, flawed, and not entirely likeable – but all the more authentic for it. The relationship between Ward and Isabelle is the perfect portrayal of a dysfunctional father-daughter relationship. Isabelle has grown up in Ward’s shadow, a man who happens to be an egomaniacal narcissist – and as much as she is disappointed by his behavior, she still wants to please him. Knowing the inner workings of their relationship helps us understand what truly motivates Isabelle, even though she herself is often self-destructive and unlikeable.
A Likely Story is, at its core, a character study about messy people harming each other, healing each other, and ultimately being redeemed. There’s some good stuff here, and I’m eager to see what Abramson writes next.