Melanie (Mellie) Lange has disappeared. A former model discovered at a young age, thirtysomething Mellie has been on the front covers of the British media for years & her fans are obsessed with hearing all about her life, but now, her father, Sir Peter Lange, says she is a danger to herself and has been admitted to a private mental health clinic. Her best friend & ex-husband do not believe Sir Peter, & when they receive short videos & texts from Mellie from a phone smuggled into the 'clinic', their worst fears seem to be realised - it seems that Mellie has been kidnapped by her own father. Sir Peter maintains that she is merely recuperating following a breakdown after the end of her marriage to Finn & the media frenzy. Who is telling the truth?
I found it difficult to get into this at first. I think it was the way it was written in interview transcripts, online blogs, diary entries, etc - it's a different way to tell the narrative but I think it can put the reader at arm's length from the characters. I did find that this dissipated the more I read & as the plot progressed, by halfway through, I pretty much had to know what really happened. The reader hears from most of the prominent characters, Mellie (younger daughter of hotel chain owner, who is spotted at a hotel launch party & propelled into modelling & subsequent fame), Sir Peter (aforementioned hotel owner who gives his viewpoint via interviews for a book), Nell (Mellie's best friend & former model), Finn (Mellie's ex-husband & father of her two children). The only person we don't hear from directly until the very end is Mellie's older sister, Zara. In fact Zara is pretty much a blank as far as her character goes which is a shame as I would have liked to heard more from her view of things.
Basically everyone tells their viewpoint & some things don't add up, i.e. is Finn lying about not having an affair? It's left for the reader to make up their minds on that one. The book looks at the toxic role of the media & people on social media in Mellie's life, & indeed we see this in real life too. Celebrities are built up one minute to be ruthlessly torn down the next. Can you trust your friends or your family, or would they sell you out to make a quick buck? It became a little repetitive at points but after an initial slow start, it maintained my interest well. I rate this one 3.5 stars (rounded up).
TW: suicide attempts, drug use.
My thanks to NetGalley & publishers, Random House UK/Transworld Publishers/Bantam Press, for the opportunity to read an ARC.