Synopsis (back cover)
Loren Wynne-Estes appears to have it all: she's the girl from the wrong
side of the tracks who's landed a handsome husband, a stunning home, a
fleet of shiny cars and two beautiful daughters ...
Then one day a fellow parent taps Loren on the shoulder outside the
grand school gate, hands her a note ... and suddenly everything's at
stake.
Loren's Facebook-perfect marriage is spectacularly exposed revealing an
underbelly of lies and betrayal. What is uncovered will scandalise a
small town, destroy lives and leave a family divided.
But who is to be believed and who is to blame? Will the right person be brought to justice or is there one who got away?
My Take
The blurb on the back of the book tries very hard not to reveal any plot details, and so I think I should follow that line. That makes reviewing it extremely hard.
The book is set in a suburb of Los Angeles with deep social divisions demarcated by the river that runs through the suburb. Loren and her family(husband and twin girls aged 5) live on High Side but she was born on Low Side. When she was young her mother left her father for another woman who already had a daughter Loren's age, Molly. Loren eventually goes to work in New York where she meets a man from High Side. She returns to Los Angeles and and they eventually marry.
The story is told by a number of narrators: Molly, a journal that Loren wrote, a journalist interviewing Loren's husband David, and the judge in a trial where David is being tried for murder,
It is a book that holds the reader's interest throughout but I guarantee that most readers will not predict the ending.
My rating: 4.5
About the author
Caroline Overington is a two-time Walkley
Award-winning journalist who is currently a senior writer and columnist
with The Australian. She is the author of two non-fiction books, Only in
New York and Kickback which is about the UN oil-for-food scandal in
Iraq. Since then she has had her first novel Ghost Child published in
October 2009 to great acclaim.
She has written eleven books, including LAST WOMAN HANGED, which won the Davitt Award for True Crime Writing in 2015. Caroline has also profiled many of the world's most famous women, including Oprah Winfrey and Hillary Clinton.
I've also read
4.4, SISTERS OF MERCY
4.5, NO PLACE LIKE HOME
4.7, I CAME TO SAY GOODBYE
4.5, CAN YOU KEEP A SECRET?
Why MYSTERIES? Because that is the genre I read.
Why PARADISE? Because that is where I live.
Among other things, this blog, the result of a 2008 New Year's resolution,
will act as a record of books that I've read, and random thoughts.
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