Sophia C. reviewed on + 289 more book reviews
This book had a lot of promise for a good family drama. Julia, an art professor, has her aging parents in her Maine summer residence when she gets word that her younger son Jack might have a problem with heroin. However, Roxana Robinson splits the focus between Jack--is he really an addict? how do we get him help?--with deep-seated family tensions. The title 'cost' might not just refer to the physical, economic, or social toll of drugs, but the re-visiting of tensions within this family that includes a domineering patriarch, his wife with the onset of dementia, a remarried ex-husband, a distant sister, and a reluctant older son. Robinson has a tendency to shift from one character's perspective to another suddenly within a chapter but the language is at times beautiful. I don't particularly like the characters as people (but that's not a criterion for rating the book as a whole) or the ending, but it was an engaging read from the list of 1001 books you must read before you die.
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