A woman has to reassess everything when an unexpected moment of heroism shatters her image of her life in Harris’ debut novel.
Grace Atherton is 39 and content with her life. She owns a shop in a little town in Kent, England, where she makes violins and cellos and has a decent-sized home, car, and a good relationship with her longtime boyfriend, David. On a getaway weekend to Paris, David’s instinctive reaction to a woman’s falling onto the Metro tracks leads to security footage of the couple going viral worldwide. The sudden attention throws a light onto all the secrets David has been keeping and forces Grace to deal with those and secrets from her own past that she has been hiding from for 20 years. With the help of a whimsical old man who frequents her shop and the angst-ridden teenage sales clerk she has befriended, Grace has to pick up the pieces of her life and put them back together in a way that, perhaps, fits even better than before. Though the first third of the novel suffers from Grace's rather unbelievable gullibility, it’s saved by the strength of the writing. Even when it’s hard to swallow that Grace truly believes what she’s saying in her narration, Harris’ capable prose draws the reader along to see what happens next. The second half is where Harris really finds her stride, and Grace’s rebuilding her life and forming stronger relationships with Nadia and Mr. Williams is where the novel shines. Especially poignant is Grace’s reckoning with what had happened her first year of music school and discovering another side of the story. Grace is a very real character even if she is exasperating at times.
A solid debut, if a bit predictable.