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3.52 AVERAGE

itsamyk's profile picture

itsamyk's review

2.0

Meh.

I have a new favorite audiobook narrator and it is Nicola Barber. She narrated both this one and The Tapestry which I listened to not too long ago. She does a fabulous job of bringing the author's words to life, infusing them with the emotion and humanity that make listening such an incredibly rich experience.

I have to admit, I came into this audiobook expecting a certain story based on the description -- poor girl seeks revenge after discovering that she is the daughter of an earl who abandoned her and her mother to marry a wealthy heiress. What I got was a much more complex tale of the search of identity and one's place in the world, set in England in the 1920s. Highly recommended.

I liked this book. It was refreshing to read about someone searching for her past that was still a linear novel. I did listen to it in one day, which was a plus. I listened to it while my dog ran away, unknown to me, since I was busy listening, so I'll always probably not remember it with the right amount of fondness!
The characters were likable and flawed. I love that it took place during the Jazz Age and mixed classes. Getting a look at the very upper class of England from the educated lower class and cynical upper class point of view was fun. And, I don't think I would be far off from guessing that one main character might be a bit of an F. Scott Fitzgerald!

More like 3.5. Definitely picked up at the ending. I enjoyed the twists but felt it took a long time to get there.

A cross between The Great Gatsby and Jane Austen about classes in 20s England. A little predictable but still enjoyable.

I really liked it! I think Willig does a great mix of chick lit and historical fiction. Great audiobook.

What a lovely book. I don’t think there’s a better word for it than that. Lovely. I really enjoyed myself reading it.

Rachel is an endearing character who finds herself with her world crashing down around her ears as she discovers her father is still alive and has another family while she and her mother lived from paycheck to paycheck in as respectable a manner as possible. Rachel goes through varying degrees of feelings spanning love, guilt, vengefulness, and forfeiture. She wars with herself constantly as she wants to hate her half-siblings but finds that she can’t because they’re merely products of their environment (which isn’t all money and parties). She wants to hate her father and she does for a while, but after more information surfaces about the whole situation she finds herself waffling on that cause too, and rightly so. What I liked even more about all this is that the situation isn’t neatly tied up in a pretty bow at the end. Rachel hasn’t come to terms with her feelings, has just barely accepted everything that’s happened, but the end note is one of growth and progress. What she does isn’t necessarily a problem-solver, and could actually pose quite a few more problems of its own, but it was the best of the options she had before her and it kind of kills me a little to say that and if you’ve read the book you’ll know what I’m talking about. It’s a decision that I could kick back my inner feminist a bit (considering the setting and people involved) and take it for what it was meant to be, which is a really solid, positive ending. I wish there would have been even more independence for Rachel but all things considered it is nice to have someone to lean on.

The story itself was gripping and I had a hard time putting it down when I had to. It didn’t help that the chapters would often end with some kind of exclamation point moment that, in order to find out reactions or what happened, you needed to read the next chapter. And it wasn’t just a few of them. It was pretty much all of them. So much difficulty walking away from the book when I wasn’t finished with it.

I liked the world Willig painted, all glitter and glam on the surface but underneath, and what Rachel saw, was the sloshing, the drunkenness, the vulnerabilities hiding behind facades. Rachel starts off the book thinking money equals having it all but by the end she has a very different opinion of that, watching people like Cece and her step-mother and her half-sister’s fiance and how they maneuver, and react, through life. She had a very narrow view of this world before going incognito and infiltrating their parties but once she was in she had a hard time maintaining her facade. Even the most put-together people had dirt under their nails in some fashion, despite all the show they talked and had unappealing leanings and ended up viewing Rachel as Vera as someone beneath them, even with the guise. It made it all the more real and brought a realistic perspective to a situation that would have otherwise been glamorized.

As the story really picked up I found myself rooting for the best possible outcome and, shock to my black heart, a truly happy ending. I got close. Like I said before the book had a sense of closure at the end without everything being so final. There’s a lot of room left there to explore but Rachel reached her objective and she came to terms, in her own way, with how it all ended up. There were heart-rending moments and points of tears (because I really am a sap) but it was all so satisfying that I had nothing left in me but joy for THE OTHER DAUGHTER.

It’s such a good story. It does the period justice and gave me such wonderful characters that I was ensnared by all of them. Even Simon, who was so aloof and barbish with his words to the point that he must have been hiding from something. There were even characters not to like but they were so richly developed that it was hard not to admire, at the very least, their presence. So I don’t think I have anything bad to say about this book because at this point I’m rambling and fangirling and just read the book, okay?

5

I received this book fro the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
ashwise360's profile picture

ashwise360's review

4.0
emotional inspiring mysterious reflective sad medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
csunshine17's profile picture

csunshine17's review

5.0
emotional funny medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

I almost cried at the end??!?

Loved it. I could not put this book down.