THEN
SHE WAS GONE
BY
LISA JEWELL
THE
BLURB:-
She was fifteen, her
mother's golden girl. She had her whole life ahead of her. And
then, in the blink of an eye, Ellie was gone.
Ten years on, Laurel
has never given up hope of finding Ellie. And then she meets a
handsome and charismatic stranger who sweeps her off her feet.
But what really takes
her breath away is when she meets his nine-year-old daughter.
Because his daughter is
the image of Ellie.
Now all those
unanswered questions that have haunted Ellie come rushing back.
THE
REALITY:-
Well, this must have
had something going for it, as I flattened it in two days. It was
not the best Lisa Jewell book I've read, and not the worst either.
It was an interesting page turner- but somehow it failed to touch me.
It didn't take me long
to work out that (spoiler alert!) Poppy was actually Ellie's
child, although I initially thought Floyd's part was going to be way
more sinister, and that he had actually fathered a child with a
fifteen-year-old girl. The tale of what happened to Ellie was really
sad, and I wholeheartedly sympathised with her (more spoiler alerts!)
locked up in that wretched basement, then being separated from her
baby and left to die.
But the character I
loved the most was nasty Noelle! She was brilliantly depicted- so
much that I could actually smell her coming of the page. Her
lack of maternal feeling (especially towards Sara-Jade, who she
describes as having “horror-movie eyes”) made me laugh with the
pleasure of schadenfreude! It is interesting that she had a totally
different opinion to Floyd with regard to Poppy, and I like the fact
that the way a child can be different things to different people is
explored throughout this book. I did, at first, find Poppy a little
too precocious to be real (really, would a nine-year-old speak the
way she did?) I got the impression that the author was putting the
words of an adult into her mouth way too much.
A cleverly worked
thriller with a stream of sadness running through it and a mix of
interesting characters. It's a good study of family life and the way
various members relate to one another, with a bittersweet and
poignant ending.
But maybe because I
loved evil Noelle so much (she did have her share of misery, too) I
found it hard to adore any of the other characters (except perhaps
Ellie).