Showing posts with label Fiona Barton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiona Barton. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Wednesday #Review - The Child by Fiona Barton #Thrillers #Psychological #Fiction

Series: Standalone
Format: E-Galley, 384 pages
Release Date: June 27, 2017
Publisher: Berkley Books
Source: NetGalley/Publisher
Genre: Fiction / Thrillers / Psychological

The author of the stunning New York Times bestseller The Widow returns with a brand-new novel of twisting psychological suspense. 
As an old house is demolished in a gentrifying section of London, a workman discovers a tiny skeleton, buried for years. For journalist Kate Waters, it s a story that deserves attention. She cobbles together a piece for her newspaper, but at a loss for answers, she can only pose a question: Who is the Building Site Baby? 
As Kate investigates, she unearths connections to a crime that rocked the city decades earlier: A newborn baby was stolen from the maternity ward in a local hospital and was never found. Her heartbroken parents were left devastated by the loss. 
But there is more to the story, and Kate is drawn house by house into the pasts of the people who once lived in this neighborhood that has given up its greatest mystery. And she soon finds herself the keeper of unexpected secrets that erupt in the lives of three women and torn between what she can and cannot tell



Author Fiona Barton's The Child is her follow up to 2016's The Widow. Reporter Kate Waters, who readers met in The Widow, returns in a story that is set against the back drop of the mysterious discovery of a skeleton that is unearthed in a part of London that is going through gentrification. Named the "Building Site Baby" by nearly everyone, Kate pushes her employer, Daily Post, to allow her to investigate the story. Who was the baby? How did the baby die? Who was the mother? Who would bury a baby? For the record, this story takes place between March 20, 2012 and May 2012, with a brief closing chapter dated June 1, 2013. 

The chapters in this story are short and revolve around (4) different perspectives: Kate, Angela Irving, Emma Simmonds, and Jude Massingham. Kate takes on an apprentice this time around. His name is Joe, and his mother is a hot shot in the business. The two actually work very well together. In fact, Joe is absolutely useful, and not just a prop
the author uses to tell the story. Kate has been involved in some very sensational stories over the years which has carried her career while others have flamed out. 

This time around, she has to weave together stories and backgrounds from (3) very different women in order to solve who the Building Site Baby was. The first character who Kate meets is Angela Irving. 28 years ago, Angela's newborn baby disappeared without a trace. Even thought she now has two other children, she keeps celebrating her missing daughters birthday. Angela has never once given up hope of seeing her again. The discovery of a baby in London causes Angela to believe that her Alice has finally been found. Angela is character who I respected a whole lot. Accused of her own babies disappearance, she never once gave up hope of finding Alice. 

The next character Kate meets is Emma Simmonds nee 
Massingham. Emma is a character who has a heavy cloud hanging over her head. She has been hiding a secret for a very long time. Nobody knows. Not her husband, not her best friend, not even her mother. After hearing about a baby being discovered in the neighborhood where she once lived, she goes into a panic. She starts counting the days until she must make a choice that could change everything. Emma is tough to handle at times because of her depression, her anxiety issues, and her past that is slowly revealed.

Readers know she has a secret. We know that the secret must be something really important for her to suddenly feel as though the world is closing in on her. What, though, is her secret? I actually felt for Emma after learning about her past. It is a shock that this sort if thing is kept in the dark, and not brought out into the light. Which brings us to Jude. Kate's encounter with Jude is barely tolerable. Jude is the wild card in this story. I will say this without fear of spoiling what happened in the story....I hated Jude.

I hated that she blamed Emma for all of her troubles with certain men, and ignored Emma when her mood and temperament seemed to change overnight. I hated Jude told her own daughter to get out of the house because she was in love with a man, and her own child was a pain in the ass. I have no respect for parents kick their kids out into the streets. When all is said and done, Jude's actions were irredeemable and reprehensible. The secrets that were exposed are really painful to read about, but necessary in understanding why certain choices were made. 

This story is not fast paced by any means. It slowly burns chapter by chapter, character by character, & step by step as Kate works with others in trying to get to the bottom of who the baby really is, and why it was dumped where it was found. The question will always be asked in these sorts of stories: Will Kate's actions bring answers to the families involved, or cause further heart break, pain, and suffering? After all, not all reporters are as understanding as Kate was in putting the pieces together and working with the police to solve the mystery. I will say this in closing. The ending was bloody brilliant. I loved how this story is wrapped up, and the characters who are involved in doing so.




Friday, February 26, 2016

#Friday Review - The Widow by Fiona Barton (Psychological Mystery)

Series: Standalone
Format: E-Galley, 336 pages
Release Date: February 16, 2016
Publisher: NAL
Source: Publisher
Genre: Thriller

When the police started asking questions, Jean Taylor turned into a different woman. One who enabled her and her husband to carry on, when more bad things began to happen...

But that woman’s husband died last week. And Jean doesn’t have to be her anymore.

There’s a lot Jean hasn’t said over the years about the crime her husband was suspected of committing. She was too busy being the perfect wife, standing by her man while living with the accusing glares and the anonymous harassment.

Now there’s no reason to stay quiet. There are people who want to hear her story. They want to know what it was like living with that man. She can tell them that there were secrets. There always are in a marriage.

The truth—that’s all anyone wants. But the one lesson Jean has learned in the last few years is that she can make people believe anything…




The Widow, by author Fiona Barton, is the story of one woman's struggles to survive after finding out her perfect husband, wasn't so perfect after all. The story itself is actually told over the course of 4 years, and features (5) different individuals who all have parts to play in the story. There is Jean Taylor, Glen Taylor, Inspector Bob Sparkes, Reporter Kate Waters, and Dawn Elliott, the mother of the missing girl Bella whose disappearance triggers a nation wide call to arms to find the girl.

"Never Take Sweets From A Stranger!"

The Widow is primarily narrated by Jean Taylor. Taylor isn't necessarily a bad character, but she's allowed herself to become subservient to what she considers to be her perfect match. Yet, when the house of cards start to crumble down around her, she still maintains her husbands innocence right up until the day he dies. She's definitely an odd duck. She's a hairdresser who adores her husband, and becomes entangled in a nightmare when he is suspected in 2 year old Bella Elliott's disappearance. One could honestly say that Jean lacks any sort of emotion throughout the book, not even when Glen dies. She is cold to the point where you wonder if she was involved alongside Glen, and just covering all her bases in case she is called on the carpet.

Jean, remaining solid and faithful to Glen, never once considers leaving him and getting out before she loses everyone in her life. When neighbors shun the couple, and they both lose their jobs, Jean more or less accepts the inevitable that she and Glen will be alone with their own miseries. The creepy part is Jean's own are so passive and non-digressive, that you have to wonder where her head is at. Jean is a study in cognitive dissonance, selective amnesia, and Folie a deux. 

From the very onset, readers will ask themselves lots of questions not only about Jean Taylor, but about Dawn Elliott as well. How can a mother turn her back on her own child, even for a moment when the world has gone to hell? How can a wife stand by her husband even after she finds out the disgusting and repugnant things he has been up to behind her back? How much patience can the authorities have when their key witness refuses to speak to them? How far will a reporter go to get the story that might make her career?

I think that this book is a must read for parents and children alike. It is also a must read to those teenagers who feel that they must publish all of their personal information including phone numbers, the address where they live, and anything else that a stalker, or pedophile, or murderer might use to gain their trust. Cybersex is a real thing. Cyber cafe's for men looking at children is a real thing. Pedophilia is a desperate call for help and a major sickness that can be cured with sterilizing medications. Don't believe me? Do your own research and spread the information to your children, and your children's friends. 

In closing, if you are expecting another Girl on the Train, or Gone Girl, you will find yourself a bit on the disappointed side. This really is the story of one woman's search for her soul and a police officer's determination to find the truth before it's too late.