Helpful Score: 2
What a fantastic rollercoaster ride! The story sucked you into the book. I couldn't stop reading! Great characters, amazing plot.It made you think about your own twists and turns in life, and what if's...
Helpful Score: 2
Unger goes off the beaten track in this novel, but not so far as for her work to be unrecognizable. While contemporary, this mystery dredges up a town's past and reawakens dark secrets that have altered the lives of those involved. Not far from New York City, The Hollows enjoys a small town identity, neighbors who have known each other since grade school. The only anomaly is the younger generation, infected by the angst of the times and the usual anti-social behaviors of adolescence, once happy and playful children become sulking teenagers, no longer as pliable or as willing to endure their parents' failings or expectations. Unger uses this generation gap to frame her story, as Maggie, a psychologist returned from NYC to marry a high-school football player turned detective, Jones Cooper, the two raising a son, Ricky. Once a sweet, joyful little boy, Ricky has morphed to a sullen teen, resisting his mother's overtures and in constant conflict with his father.
The twist is in the secret history of The Hollows. When Ricky's girlfriend, Charlene, disappears, everyone remembers another disappearance from years ago, the death of a classmate that has reverberated through the lives of the main characters and left many with uneasy consciences. And for all the disaffection of the younger generation, more than one older resident is disturbed when long-buried secrets are unearthed. While the father-son conflict is exacerbated when Jones investigates Charlene's whereabouts, Maggie jumps to her son's defense to avoid concerns about the state of her marriage, counseling patients in an office connected to her home. Much of the drama is stirred up by Maggie's fears and lack of professional boundaries, but there is no shortage of guilty parties as Unger taps into the small town psyche of The Hollows. Sometimes obvious, sometimes clever, Unger indulges in a lot of emotionalism and the dashed expectations of youth. But that is her style- and her charm- as a writer, the murky territory of memory and forgiveness.
The twist is in the secret history of The Hollows. When Ricky's girlfriend, Charlene, disappears, everyone remembers another disappearance from years ago, the death of a classmate that has reverberated through the lives of the main characters and left many with uneasy consciences. And for all the disaffection of the younger generation, more than one older resident is disturbed when long-buried secrets are unearthed. While the father-son conflict is exacerbated when Jones investigates Charlene's whereabouts, Maggie jumps to her son's defense to avoid concerns about the state of her marriage, counseling patients in an office connected to her home. Much of the drama is stirred up by Maggie's fears and lack of professional boundaries, but there is no shortage of guilty parties as Unger taps into the small town psyche of The Hollows. Sometimes obvious, sometimes clever, Unger indulges in a lot of emotionalism and the dashed expectations of youth. But that is her style- and her charm- as a writer, the murky territory of memory and forgiveness.
DISAPPOINTMENT EXTRAORDINAIRE!
I have read and loved everything that Lisa Unger has written. However, unfortunately, this book will not be placed in that category.
The writing just seemed juvenile, unintelligent and a bit drug out. It took about a 100 pages to feel like anything worthwhile was about to happen (it never really did). I realize some character development is necessary in the beginning, but enough is enough. And to top that off I still didn't feel like I liked the characters or that they were at all three dimensional.
I really wanted to like this book. But it was just a total waste of my valuable reading time. Out of five stars I would give this one and a half stars. I will still read the next book she writes though. Everybody gets a mulligan!
I have read and loved everything that Lisa Unger has written. However, unfortunately, this book will not be placed in that category.
The writing just seemed juvenile, unintelligent and a bit drug out. It took about a 100 pages to feel like anything worthwhile was about to happen (it never really did). I realize some character development is necessary in the beginning, but enough is enough. And to top that off I still didn't feel like I liked the characters or that they were at all three dimensional.
I really wanted to like this book. But it was just a total waste of my valuable reading time. Out of five stars I would give this one and a half stars. I will still read the next book she writes though. Everybody gets a mulligan!