Buzzwords Cover Challenge 25: Pattern
CBR17 Bingo: Red (A book with a red cover)
Official plot summary:
In the Long Island oceanfront community of Mattauk, three different women discover that midlife changes bring a whole new type of empowerment…
After Nessa James’s husband dies and her twin daughters leave for college, she’s left all alone in a trim white house not far from the ocean. In the quiet of her late forties, the former nurse begins to hear voices. It doesn’t take long for Nessa to realise that the voices calling out to her belong to the dead–a gift she’s inherited from her grandmother, which comes with special responsibilities.
On the cusp of 50, suave advertising director Harriett Osborne has just witnessed the implosion of her lucrative career and her marriage. She hasn’t left her house in months, and from the outside, it appears as if she and her garden have both gone to seed. But Harriett’s life is far from over–in fact, she’s undergone a stunning and very welcome metamorphosis.
Ambitious former executive Jo Levison has spent thirty long years at war with her body. The free-floating rage and hot flashes that arrive with the beginning of menopause feel like the very last straw–until she realizes she has the ability to channel them, and finally comes into her power.
Guided by voices only Nessa can hear, the trio of women discover a teenage girl whose body was abandoned beside a remote beach. The police have written the victim off as a drug-addicted sex worker, but the women refuse to buy into the official narrative. Their investigation into the girl’s murder leads to more bodies, and to the town’s most exclusive and isolated enclave, a world of stupendous wealth where the rules don’t apply. With their newfound powers, Jo, Nessa, and Harriett will take matters into their own hands…
This was my IRL book club’s selection for April (because a murder mystery starring three witchy women seemed really appropriate in the same month as Easter (see my description of traditional Norwegian Easter pastimes here). We had a very interesting discussion about it at the end of the month, and it turned out to be a bit of a divisive book. I absolutely loved it, but I suspect that if I’d been younger when I read it (as many members of my book club are) or a man, this book might not have worked for me on as many levels as it did.
One of the things that turned out to be an issue with a lot of the readers was the difficulty in pinpointing the genre of the book. This book isn’t an urban fantasy novel, even though there are seemingly supernatural elements in it. It’s not a straight-up mystery/crime novel. It’s not literary fiction. It’s very feminist, and some of the women in the story are described by others as witches, but it doesn’t fit neatly into any one category, and for some of the members, that was apparently really frustrating. I’ve classified it as a contemporary fiction novel with magical realism elements, and there is a mystery to be solved, but it doesn’t follow the traditional genre beats of a mystery novel.
Fully in my perimenopausal era now, there were many things in this novel that I recognised almost too well. Jo’s overwhelming sense of rage at everyone and everything all the time. Harriet getting to a point where she just wants to do her own thing and doesn’t give a single f*ck about what anyone says about it. Nessa is probably the nicest of the three protagonists, but also the one I identified the least with. Her supernatural gift, which it’s established as something that women of her family have shared for generations, seems rather horrible. Being able to see the ghosts of dead women, who need the culprits brought to justice, and just not getting peace until the issue is dealt with – it seems like a heavy burden. Thankfully, she has the two other women to assist her in avenging these helpless victims (because while it starts with one dead body, it becomes clear that she is just one in a very long line of women who have met a horrible end in the area).
Full review on my blog.
