From the BLURB:
'Karin Slaughter's most ambitious, most
emotional, and best novel. So far, anyway.'
—James Patterson
The stunning
new standalone, with a chilling edge of psychological suspense, from the
bestselling author of Pretty Girls.
Two girls
are forced into the woods at gunpoint. One runs for her life. One is left
behind ...
Twenty-eight
years ago, Charlotte and Samantha Quinn's happy smalltown family life was torn
apart by a terrifying attack on their family home. It left their mother dead.
It left their father - Pikeville's notorious defence attorney - devastated. And
it left the family fractured beyond repair, consumed by secrets from that
terrible night.
Twenty-eight
years later, and Charlie has followed in her father's footsteps to become a
lawyer herself - the archetypal good daughter. But when violence comes to
Pikeville again - and a shocking tragedy leaves the whole town traumatised -
Charlie is plunged into a nightmare. Not only is she the first witness on the
scene, but it's a case which can't help triggering the terrible memories she's
spent so long trying to suppress. Because the shocking truth about the crime
which destroyed her family nearly thirty years ago won't stay buried for ever
...
***
‘The Good
Daughter’ is the latest novel from my favourite crime-writer, Karin Slaughter.
The last
Karin Slaughter book I read was 2016’s ‘The
Kept Woman’, eighth book in her long-running ‘Will Trent’ series which in
recent books has become a convergence of her previous series, ‘Grant
County’. I enjoyed ‘The Kept Woman’, but also struggled with it in a way I
haven’t done with a Karin Slaughter book before … and a lot of the struggle was
a feeling of series-stagnation, a sense that Book No. 8 was a bit of a “filler
episode” with little happening to advance characterisation. Which basically
boils down to a bit of fatigue for a series that is, essentially, 14-books long
by now.
So I was
somewhat happy to come to ‘The Good Daughter’, and realise it’s a stand-alone
book. Even though by the end of it, I did find myself half-hoping that Ms.
Slaughter would announce this as the first in a new series she’s about to kick
off (which, hey!, isn’t that wild a possibility – since her 2014 novel ‘Cop
Town’ was meant to be stand-alone and is now rumoured to become the first in a
series!).
‘The Good
Daughter’ revolves around sisters Charlotte ‘Chuck’ and Samantha ‘Sam’ Quinn –
and their small hometown of Pikeville, Georgia. Twenty-eight years ago Chuck
and her older sister Sam were the victims of an awful act of vengeance aimed at
their notorious defence attorney father, that resulted in the death of their
mother and left both girls with very different scars. We begin in 1989 and the
awful events of one night, an event readers will keep pivoting to and see from
both Sam and Chuck’s perspectives – then we land in 2017, when the sisters have
not spoken to one another for close to a decade, even as they’ve chosen very
different paths for themselves, while still following in their father’s
lawyering footsteps.
A
school-shooting forces the sisters to come together, for their father’s sake, and
the young woman accused of the heinous act which has left two dead.
I have not
been a very good reader this year (let alone reviewer!). I have been reading,
but mostly manuscripts and Top Secret projects I can’t exactly blog about. And
so I have felt very much deficient as an avid reader in 2017, with only a
meagre number of *published* books completed from my towering TBR-pile. But
Karin Slaughter has changed that, thanks to the compulsively brilliant ‘The
Good Daughter’. I feel a little unlocked now, and it’s no wonder when Slaughter
is one of those mainstay authors whom I have come to rely on as a constant
reading lodestone at least once a year.
‘The Good
Daughter’ is a fabulous introduction to Slaughter’s crime novels, for those who
have never come across her before. Even as this stand-alone novel is quite a
different beast from her usual crime-dramas … it’s much more a family-saga than
anything else she’s written, with a firm focus on the love between the two
sisters and their complicated relationship with their charming, slippery
father, Rusty. Slaughter’s previous books have all tended to be focused on the
prosecution side of things too – with a police chief, FBI-agent and coroner
making up her usual list of protagonists – but ‘The Good Daughter’ switches
things up brilliantly, by aligning us with the defence-attorney team on the
side of the accused, and painting small-town cops in a none too flattering
manner … These are all thoroughly new avenues that Slaughter is exploring, but
it’s all still an amalgamation of what makes Karin Slaughter the top of her
game.
I will warn
that, yes, like most crime writers of today – violence against women is a huge
component of this book (and most of Slaughter’s works, even as male characters
also get dealt their fair share of violence). What I appreciate about Slaughter
though, is that it’s not for nothing. The physical and sexual violence meted out
against her female characters is never used to advance a man’s storyline – and it’s
never so throwaway that she doesn’t pick apart, to the bone, the ramifications
of that violence beyond the act itself.
As is always
the case, Slaughter’s characters are broken. Not just by the past, and a
collective, harrowing and violent event from Sam and Chuck’s childhood – that
changed their young lives’ forever – but they’re broken in more recent grief of
loss, and marriage-breakdowns. Sam and Chuck are messy, and it’s easy to see
why, when we meet their enigmatic father Rusty who – for all his caricature
bluster and good-nature, is just as hollowed-out as his daughters by all that
they’ve lost. Rusty reminded me more though, of a stone – smoothed by being
battered and washed over by the current of time, while his two daughters are
still jagged rock formations, not yet ready to face the waves. Even Slaughter’s
minor-characters are sublimely drawn and you just know that if she wanted to
(again, I’m crossing my fingers for a series here) there’d be some fantastic
stories to pluck out of them … Rusty’s secretary Lenore, being a prime example.
I will say
too though – that something which struck me as so different about ‘The Good
Daughter’ from Slaughter’s other books is how likeable all the main players are. I know how this sounds but trust
me, – some of Slaughter’s long-time readers (me included) take serious issue
with some of her protagonists (*cough* Lena Adams *cough*). Sometimes it’s an
enduring hatred, other times what starts as hate-of-a-thousand-suns cools over
a series as their layers are peeled back … but pretty generally, Slaughter
loves a character who lives in the gray-areas of morality, and whom readers
have to really work at begrudgingly liking. To give you a teaser of this (which
spoils nothing, because you learn it in the first chapter or two of book one!)
is that hero of the ‘Grant County’ series, Jeffrey Tolliver, cheated on the
series’ other protagonist, Sara Linton and when we meet them they are bitterly
divorced.
This kind of
ingrained dislike of awful, damaged characters isn’t really a factor in ‘The
Good Daughter’. Chuck and Sam certainly have their issues – Chuck especially,
lives with more than one moral ambiguity. But you don’t hate them. At least, I
didn’t. Instead I felt an instant kinship and tenderness towards both of them –
also, possibly, because we first meet them as children, experiencing the worst
moment of their lives. Perhaps we’re made to be instantly forgiving for some of
their more caustic behaviour because we know where it stems from … but I don’t
think so. At least, that’s not the only reason. I think Slaughter has just
really excelled at writing two damaged but determined women who are fascinating
to read bump against one another’s so different personalities, and find a way
to connect as sisters after such a long silence.
‘The Good Daughter’
is, unsurprisingly, one of my fave readers of 2017 so far. It may even be
pretty high up on my list of All Time Favourite Crime Novels. A heart-hurting
slice of Georgia dark, from a crime-writer who has managed to pivot into family
drama with such fine characterisations, that I find myself in awe of an author I
already considered a favourite. I will only say that I’d have liked more
courtroom drama – but I’ll quietly hope we get more, should this book prove to
be the first in a series …
5/5
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