Pomegranate finds the balance between precise rhythm and freefall that was not just a joy to read, heartwarming and defiant, but also encouraging and embracing, too. The story focuses really only on one character, and while there are numberless secondary characters crossing in and out of her orbit she is the heart of the story, and so the fact that she feels perfectly flawed and real and like someone I could know, someone I would want to know, really grounded this piece. In addition, most all of the secondary characters felt realized and storied. They may only have crossed into our protagonist’s story to demonstrate one thing or another, but they didn’t feel flimsy or like placeholders, even when our time spent with them was short. The writing itself was really wonderful. It felt like tumbling, like poetry that had lost its way and became prose. The technique of not just alternating the present time with the past but switching from first-person narration to third-person narration while doing so was employed really well. It could have felt hacky or a little too-on-the-nose, but instead it really did a good job of showing how the past lives in our present, informing it, and haunting it. Lastly the story itself was strong. This isn’t a just story about reform, or finding oneself, or inner strength and resilience, though it does encompass all of those things. This is a story about reconciliation, not with the outer world but with the inner world, and finding transformation in that forgiveness. It’s a love story, a story of nurture and kindness and the growth that can only come from that environment, but all of that is enclosed in the interiority of a person struggling to make every day meaningful.
I enjoyed the actual reading of this story, it was paced well and made me want to keep reading. It doesn’t get a perfect score because it felt somewhat predictable. If you read the description you can make a list guessing what kind of traumas she experienced in her past, what some of her experiences in prison were like, and what specific difficulties would arise out of prison, and if you just stuck to the normal conventions in this flavor of story you would have nailed almost all of the beats of this story. So, there weren’t any surprises, narratively speaking. But the masterful writing and the intimacy of the prose didn't leave me feeling like these were mere tropes, checkboxes on a list, and so the somewhat expectedness of the developments and experiences didn’t really detract from the story for me. I would have liked for it to have pushed me a little more, had a few more surprises, and that keeps it shy of a perfect five stars. However, having said that I highly recommend it, it is a quick read, comfortable and uplifting, even and especially when navigating what life looks like after years of unaddressed trauma and grief.
I want to thank the author, the publisher, Atria Books, and NetGalley, who provided a complimentary eARC for review. I am leaving this review voluntarily.