GeminiJen
I was looking forward to reading this book. Hailed on the dust jacket as Sunday Times Number One bestseller and heaped with praise from fellow authors, it raised high hopes for a good read. And, not having read any of the author’s previous novels, I was looking forward to discovering a new writer.
Unfortunately, this wasn’t a book which would encourage me to read more by this author. As mine is one of the early comments, I’ll try not to give away any spoilers in terms of details of the story except to say that I found it an easy read but unconvincing and lacking in substance. For me, most of the main characters were quite unsympathetic, the plot was implausible and, while there were quite a few twists and turns as the book reached its climax, the final one was for me simply a twist too far, just too out of character.
That said the storyline about Toma Albu got me from start to end. And, while the tie-up between the two threads is fairly predictable, I found this the most satisfying part of the novel. I was interested in him, his life and the developing relationship between him and Lexi and should have enjoyed more.
My question for the author relates to the dust jacket. While I try not to judge a book by its cover, the significance of this one was lost on me. Unless I’ve missed something, it seemed to bear no relationship to the story. All I can think is that it was intended to convey the impression of a good holiday/ poolside read? Was this the author’s intention....or the publisher’s choice perhaps?
I think the cover did convey, very effectively, both wealth and longing, and whilst there wasn’t literally a scene whereby Lexi say legs dangling in the pool, she did have a house with a pool and so she could feasibly have sat in it and wistfully pondered her life choices. The publisher leads on the decision of what the cover might look like, but I was 100 percent supportive of this cover as I think it sums up the book authentically.