Fiona Barton. The Widow. Toronto: Penguin Canada, 2016.
Obsessions, of different shapes, drive this engrossing novel. When Glen Taylor is accidentally killed in front of a bus, his widow Jean is besieged mercilessly by the press for her story. Finally, Jean chooses to contract with a sympathetic journalist, Kate Waters, to escape the hounding; Kate’s newspaper pays for a hotel suite where they retreat with a photographer. Immersed in relative luxury, Jean – privately, in her head – reviews her life with Glen, dreading the obligatory interview next day. We watch her story unfolding in tandem with DI Bob Sparkes’s long investigation of a missing child, Bella Elliot. Jean comes across as a naïf in the beginning; she’d worked as a hairdresser from a young age, becoming the compliant wife adoring her husband Glen.
DI Sparkes and his team make an exhaustive but unsuccessful search for Bella. The longer it takes, the more obsessive he becomes to find whoever snatched the little girl. His journey is very complex via a few suspects but ultimately he believes that Glen took her—having discovered the man’s online porn addiction—but lacks solid evidence. Jean consistently stays loyal to Glen but with constant police visits and a growing media mob, she starts rationalizing some of his now-known behaviour. Plus her craving for motherhood increases with each tick of her biological clock. Glen is arrested and goes to trial for abduction since no body is involved. The trial falls apart, Glen goes home, it gets worse. Many more twists and turns are coming.
The Widow is thoroughly absorbing. This is how an author at the top of her game crafts a convoluted story with such resonating characters. Related from several POVs, each piece fuels the next in a dramatic dance.
Jean
▪ I’m not fooled. She doesn’t care about me. She just wants the story. (50)
▪ It wasn’t meant to be a problem. It’s just that having a baby was all I wanted to do in my life. (116)
▪ It was all very clever—they got some police officer to pretend to be a young woman on the Internet and chat him up. (156)
▪ They must see this is all her fault. That’s what Glen and I think. She let her baby out of her sight. (172)
▪ Wonderful wife. This is my role now. The wonderful wife who stood by her husband. (175)
▪ Dawn suddenly wheeled on Jean. “What has he done with my baby, Mrs. Taylor? What has your husband done with her?” (214)
Sparkes
▪ “You are obsessed with this case, Bob,” Eileen had said the other night. (127)
▪ If Jean loved children so much, why would she stay with a man who looks at child abuse on the computer? he thought. (129)
▪ The next day, he was named and shamed along with his bosses in the papers as one of the “top cops” who had “wrecked” the Bella case. (187)
▪ “You need some time off, Bob,” Chief Superintendent Parker told him firmly at their formal interview the following day. (194)
▪ “Did he hear me talk about Bella? Is that how he found her?” (244)
Best line: She was a sturdy young woman with a degree and a career path apparently tattooed on the inside of her eyelids. (191)
Rachel Hawkins. The Storm. USA: St. Martin’s Press, 2025.
St. Medard’s Bay, Alabama: a magnet for budget summer crowds and deadly hurricanes on the Gulf of Mexico. Geneva is the third generation of the Corliss family to own the Rosalie Inn, a faded hotel she runs with the help of her friend Edie. A booking for a month from writer August Fletcher saves Geneva temporarily from financial worries. He’s preparing to write the memoir of Gloria (“Lo”) Bailey, the centre of a huge scandal around St. Medard’s Bay forty years ago. The still-beautiful Lo accompanies him, curious about her old hometown. The worst hurricanes here claimed many lives over the years, including Lo’s father, and it was in 1984’s Hurricane Marie that Landon Fitzroy died, son of Alabama’s then Governor. Gloria Bailey was accused of killing him. Her trial fell apart when the prosecution failed to provide proof—but public opinion trashed her.
Geneva is a true crime fan, so she’s as intrigued with the story as Fletcher is—reading all the old newspaper clippings her mother saved. Mom Ellen had been good friends at school with Lo, but oddly had never mentioned that to her daughter. Others are equally interested to know the truth about Landon’s death. Even though local people have long memories of the shameless slut who destroyed the powerful Fitzroy dynasty, Lo is used to ignoring them; Geneva warms to Lo’s engaging personality. However, with past grievances surfacing, you might guess another major storm is brewing, and not just in the weather. Hurricane Lizzie is on its way.
Author Hawkins integrates the voices of Lo’s contemporaries with those of the current Rosalie Inn residents, leading the pre-storm tension. Lo herself is a larger-than-life character, much like the surrounding climate; true crime(s) revealed in lightning strikes.
Voices
▪ Honestly, I sometimes wish it had just been sex between us. That would’ve been a lot easier, a lot simpler. (38)
▪ “Alison Fitzroy is my cousin, slut,” he says, the word somehow sounding worse in that honeyed old-money voice. (74)
▪ “I know it sounds silly, but I’m kind of hoping the book is this big ol’ hit and then we get people wanting to stay at the inn because of it.” (89)
▪ I don’t know how long Mr. Fitzroy stood there, silent as the statue they built for him a few years ago, the one that makes him look like a fuckin’ Star Wars villain. (101)
▪ It was pitch-black, and someone yelled about a flashlight, maybe Ellen, but I couldn’t be sure. Everything that came after that is still a nightmarish blur. (129)
▪ “Her, and that guy, August. Writing this book. Dragging up the past. The fact that it’s been forty years, but it’s still like she’ll die if she’s not the center of attention.” (138)
▪ “She’s fun, and sassy and sweet, and she’s everyone’s best friend. Until she’s not.” (138)
▪ “That’s the book she thinks we’re writing, yeah,” he says finally, and I see him pull the box a little tighter. “But I don’t know if that’s the book I’m writing anymore.” (172)