Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THROUGH THE RIPTIDE by Phyllis  Fahrie

THROUGH THE RIPTIDE

by Phyllis Fahrie and Bert Murray


A young woman finds herself drawn into the seductive world of the Hamptons in Murray and Fahrie’s novel.

Lindsey is a 30-year-old New Yorker working at a PR firm. Her life is turned upside down one night when a man follows her home and assaults her in her apartment. If not for the quick action of a friendly neighbor and his vicious guard dog, Lindsey would have been raped or worse—but the event still leaves its mark. She flees the city to her aunt’s country house in Westchester, hoping to recover, finding it impossible to return to Manhattan. (“My shiny Big Apple wonderland had shriveled up like a piece of dried fruit,” she muses.) When her ex-boyfriend Karl Tuck proposes that she follow him back to Southampton, Lindsey is hesitant to fall back into bad habits with the seductive and smug Karl, but he assures her that their relationship will be all business as he works to mount a festival for the Hamptons’ wealthy elite and provides her with an excuse to stay out of the city. As the two find themselves in the office together, Lindsey can’t help but wonder how long it will be before she’s be back in his bed as well. (“He was an addiction and I was an addict in danger of slipping back because I’d returned to the old bad neighborhood too soon,” she thinks as passionate memories consume her thoughts.) Lindsey tries to focus instead on her kooky neighbor, Jasmine Fournier, a wild free spirit who shops at vintage stores and seems to know everyone in town. She confesses to Linsdey early on that she has a secret, but as with the Hamptons setting itself, it will take Lindsey time to fully understand all the intricate details. She immerses herself in the world of the wealthy and the region’s unique history, hoping to bring a touch of art and culture to Karl’s festival. Along the way, she encounters the enigmatic Colin Preston; as Lindsey struggles to sort out her feelings, she also finds herself drawn to the handsome stranger and his eccentric Hamptons family.

The Hamptons provide a breathtaking backdrop for a romance, and they lend the narrative a softer, more inviting ambiance through Lindsey’s thoughtful focus on history and nature—it’s a nice contrast to the glitz and glamour that readers might expect. The harmony of the beaches has an uneasy undertone to it, however; Lindsey’s attack is so vivid and brutal that readers will be expecting monsters or murders behind every sand dune, a tension that clashes with the much gentler, conventional romantic stakes the book eventually settles into. Lindsey’s memories of passionate hotel room nights with Karl are steamy enough to keep pulses racing, and Jasmine is a fabulous creation bringing fun, mystery, and vulnerability to the proceedings. (In one of the book’s best moments, when Jasmine learns her beloved employer is on his deathbed, she rushes immediately in the opposite direction to steal his book collection, howling, “I won’t let this opportunity slip through my fingers. Not this time. Yes! Yes! I deserve everything.”) Lindsey herself is a strong heroine—her flaws and weakness for Karl’s muscles included. Fans of the romance genre might not uncover any major surprises following her around the ritzy world of the Hamptons, but she still offers them a lot to love.

A fairly standard romance bolstered by intriguing characters and a lush setting.