A review by kari_f
The White Hare by Jane Johnson

4.0


A darkly spellbinding story taking place in a seaside village, The White Hare tells the story of three generations of women, the old house they have fled to after a shocking secret was revealed, and a long-held village secret. The setting is atmospheric and eerie, the main characters are flawed and secretive, and the house has a tragic history that is slowly unraveled.

Things I enjoyed:

⁃ Mother/daughter relationships are examined from multiple perspectives, with some generational trauma thrown into the mix. The relationships felt realistically flawed as mothers and daughters struggled to understand each other.
⁃ Real Cornish folklore fits beautifully into this fictional tale of a seaside locale with a complicated history.
⁃ Some of the side characters were beautifully quirky and provided a support system to this family who desperately needed it.
⁃ The atmosphere was done beautifully, with a perfect blend of loveliness and haunting eeriness.


A few things I wished:

⁃ There are several instances where the young child character speaks in a way that feels far beyond what a five year old would say, and I wish parts of it felt more accurate to a real five year old. (Some of this is explained in the book, but there were instances outside of this explanation.)
⁃ There was a section of exposition near the 3/4 mark that felt forced in how it was explained to the reader. I loved what was revealed but not how it was revealed.

Overall I enjoyed the quiet magical realism of this story and the unraveling of all of the secrets!

Thanks so much to Netgalley and Simon & Schuster for the advanced readers copy!

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