Author: Sally Hepworth
Narrators: Barrie Kreinik, Jessica Douglas-Henry
Publication: Macmillan, audio, 2023
Genre: Suspense
Setting: Present-day Australia
Description: Pippa and Gabe Gerard bought their dream house, several hours from Melbourne, on the coast and planned to live there happily with their young daughters. They did not realize the cliffs behind their house are a popular place for would-be suicides until it was too late. Pippa is stressed out, wondering when the next despairing soul will turn up and has the local police on speed-dial. Gabe has been able to persuade seven people to walk away, to the amazement of the police, and has even been written up in a local newspaper. But one evening, as Pippa watches nervously from the kitchen window, Gabe is unsuccessful with the eighth individual, standing too close to the cliff with his arms oddly extended, and when Pippa learns that he knew the deceased, she can’t help wondering if the woman jumped – or if she was pushed. For the first time, Pippa faces the fact that Gabe has not always been truthful to her and, while Pippa believes he is her soulmate and loves her and their girls, she looks back at their shared history and agonizes about what her husband might be capable of doing.
My Impression: This is a story of psychological suspense and relationships told in flashbacks from the point of view of Pippa, an estate lawyer, living with her husband and two small girls in Portsea, a coastal town in Australia, and Amanda, the deceased woman who went over the cliff. Pippa did not recognize Amanda when she saw her talking to Gabe on the cliff but she senses something is wrong, although she does not share her concern about what she saw to the police. Later, when the newspapers report the tragedy, she realizes she and Gabe knew the woman – Amanda was married to Gabe’s former boss, Max, who fired him. At first, the police treat the incident as sad but routine:
“We’ll be in touch if we need anything else.” Tamil looks like she’s going to walk back to her colleagues, but she hesitates a moment. “I read the article in the local paper. It’s pretty impressive, the number of lives you’ve saved. Focus on that.”
She smiles, then moves off to join her colleagues, who are huddled under the newly fixed tent. The mood feels casual, I notice. A couple of them are talking about where to stop for lunch on the way back to Somerville.
No one suspects Gabe of anything, I realize. I know I should feel relieved by all this, yet all I can think about is the position of Gabe’s hands when he acted out the lunge for Tamil, and how it looked nothing like what I’d seen out the window.
Pippa and Amanda also had different expectations of marriage: Pippa and Gabe had loyalty and an irresistible attraction to each other, while Amanda, product of a broken home, demanded fidelity from Max. The flashbacks also reveal there were many reasons why Gabe might have a motive for pushing Amanda off the cliff. Is Pippa disloyal to suspect him or foolish to hesitate? Overall, I thought this was suspenseful and well done and I would likely read more from Hepworth. This review is for Australia Reading Month, hosted by Brona’s Books, and it is my twenty-seventh book for Carol’s Cloak and Dagger Reading Challenge.Source: Library
Thanks for your contribution Constance - I haven't read any Hepworth books yet, but she is very popular, and now I can see why thanks to your review.
ReplyDeleteI'm with you though, re "flashbacks, unreliable narrators and twisty endings". After Gone Girl I feel like I'm done with that device in domestic crime stories.
I noticed that other reviewers were contemptuous of the heroine for being so passive or enabling, which reminded me of when my book group read Rebecca 25 years ago and one member kept saying, "Why doesn't she just talk to her husband about his first wife?" Du Maurier made it clear her nameless heroine didn't have the self-confidence to ask and here, the heroine had predetermined that loyalty would be the cornerstone of her marriage and was going to stick to that.
ReplyDeleteUnreliable narrators have really become both ubiquitous and tedious! Psychological suspense is definitely not my favorite genre. I don't mind an occasional flashback and I do want to visit Melbourne and beach towns like Portsea in this book, however!
Thanks for the review. I also like the comments!
ReplyDelete