Title: Family Secrets
Author: Liz Byrski
Published: Pan Macmillan Au July 2014
Status: Read from July 12 to 15, 2014 — I own a copy {Courtesy the publisher}
My Thoughts:
When Liz Byrski turned fifty she keenly felt the lack of literature that reflected the lives of women in mid life, and drawing on her experience as a journalist and freelance writer, set out to change that by writing the sort of books that she wanted to read.
Family Secrets is Liz Byrski’s eighth fiction novel, a story about love, regrets, forgiveness and redemption.
After a long, debilitating illness, Gerald Hawkins passing is both a cause for sadness and relief for his wife Connie, and his adult children Kerry and Andrew. For decades they have lived their lives as Gerald, a dominant man, had wished them too and now that he is gone they are all forced to find their own way forward.
Connie chooses to revisit her past, announcing her plans to go to England for an extended holiday, hoping to reconnect with the woman she was before she married Gerald and gave up her dreams to become a dutiful wife and mother in Tasmania, and to rekindle her relationship with her childhood best friend, and Gerald’s sister, Flora, who has been estranged from the family for many years. Connie’s journey is not what she imagined it would be however, especially when she is confronted with some home truths about the choices she made and the person she has become.
Meanwhile her children are grappling with their changing futures. Andrew, disillusioned with his career and his marriage, is unsurprised to discover his wife’s affair but determined to protect his teenage daughter, Brooke, from the fall-out. Kerry, harbouring long held resentment and guilt about her father is at a loss when he dies, and is left struggling with the symptoms of clinical depression.
Byrski explores the way in which it is often difficult to be honest with ourselves, and others, and the corrosive nature of failing to accept the truth. Each main character in Family Secrets is challenged to reconcile their past and escape the shadow of Gerald’s legacy by taking responsibility for the people whom they have become, and making changes that allow them to reconnect with the people they love.
I thought Family Secrets was an engaging read, not especially gripping but a thoughtful and well told story of realistic domestic drama.
Family Secrets is available to purchase from
Pan Macmillan I I Booktopia I Bookworld I via Booko
Amazon AU I Amazon US I Amazon UK
and all good bookstores.
2 Comments (+add yours?)