Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Worry
Worry: A Novel | Jessica Westhead
4 posts | 5 read
A riveting novel about a mother’s all-consuming worry for her child over forty-eight hours at a remote cottage with old friends and a mysterious neighbour, for fans of Little Fires Everywhere and Truly Madly Guilty Ruth is the fiercely protective mother of almost-four-year-old Fern. Together they visit a remote family cottage belonging to Stef, the woman who has been Ruth’s best friend—and Ruth's husband’s best friend—for years. Stef is everything Ruth is not—confident, loud, carefree—and someone Ruth cannot seem to escape. While Fern runs wild with Stef’s older twins and dockside drinks flow freely among the adults, they’re joined by Stef’s neighbour Marvin, a man whose frantic pursuit of fun is only matched by his side comments about his absent wife. As day moves into night and darkness settles over the woods, the edges between these friends and a stranger sharpen until a lingering suspicion becomes an undeniable threat.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
Zephsomething
Worry: A Novel | Jessica Westhead
post image
Mehso-so

I mostly enjoyed this book but the way it jumped from past to present (sometimes within the same sentence) was occasionally hard to track. Overall though a very interesting story about two women, their families, and the way their lives have twined around each other.

review
janeycanuck
Worry: A Novel | Jessica Westhead
post image
Mehso-so

This was... odd. I didn‘t mind the present-day story, despite there being a few bits that were particularly strange but the snippets from the past didn‘t do it for me.

review
NerdyRev
Worry: A Novel | Jessica Westhead
post image
Pickpick

This is a short, but tense book. A cabin party is happening between two lifelong friends, their kids, one husband, and an odd neighbor who speaks about not having kids often. Memories flow as drinks flow and will interrupt the narrative without warning. This is a slow book, but very well written.