Too Close to Home: A Novel
Too Close to Home: A Novel book cover

Too Close to Home: A Novel

Paperback – December 15, 2015

Price
$5.88
Format
Paperback
Pages
512
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345549532
Dimensions
5.14 x 1.03 x 7.98 inches
Weight
14.1 ounces

Description

Praise for Susan Lewis “This emotionally charged story keeps you at the edge of your seat.” —RT Book Reviews , on Behind Closed Doors “Spellbinding . . . The atmosphere grows more intense with the turn of each page.” —The Free Lance–Star , on No Child of Mine Susan Lewis is the internationally bestselling author of more than thirty novels, including No Child of Mine, Don’t Let Me Go, The Truth About You, Never Say Goodbye, Behind Closed Doors, and No Place to Hide . Having resided in France and the United States for many years, she now lives in the rural county of Gloucestershire, England. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Nothing was happening.Everything was completely still, motionless, not a single rustle in the atmosphere, no stirrings within.The only sounds, muted by closed windows, were the cries of white-xadbellied gulls as they soared around the neutral sky.Jenna Moore, petite, dark-xadhaired, and emerald-xadeyed, was sitting at the cluttered dining room table staring out at the winter-xadbleak garden. Looking at her, no one would have guessed she was the mother of four, the eldest being fifteen. Her smooth, playfully freckled features and girlish frame made her appear far closer to thirty than the forty she actually was.It was Sunday afternoon and she was supposed to be making the most of some rare hours alone. The younger children—xadJosh, age eight, and the five-xadyear-xadold twins, Flora and Wills—xadwere on playdates down in the village, while Paige, fifteen last birthday, was somewhere with her stepfather on this sprawling misty peninsula, though Jenna wasn’t for the moment entirely sure where. All she knew was that it never failed to warm her to think of how close Paige and Jack were. He was the only father Paige had ever known, since her own had abandoned them when Paige was barely a year old. They’d never heard from him again, though Jenna had felt genuinely sorry when she’d heard how he’d lost his life in a rock-xadclimbing accident at the age of thirty. By then Paige was seven years old and Jenna was married to Jack, who’d accompanied them to the funeral and had sat with Paige for a long time afterward explaining how losing her real father wasn’t going to make any difference to them.“So you’re my real daddy, really?” Paige had insisted.“That’s right. I’ll always be here for you, and no one will ever be prouder of you than me.”“But why didn’t my other daddy live with us?”“He did for a while, when you were a tiny baby, but he wasn’t really ready to be a daddy. He wanted to do other things.”“You don’t want to do other things, do you?”Jack had shaken his head gravely. “All I want to do is be your daddy, and Mummy’s husband—xadand maybe a daddy to a brother or sister for you too. Would you like that?”Paige had nodded eagerly, which had twisted Jenna’s heart with longing. After two miscarriages she was starting to worry that she’d never give Jack a child of his own.Blinking as an unexpected breakthrough of sunlight bathed the garden in a rich golden glow, Jenna began picturing Jack’s and Paige’s faces as they probably were now: intent, laughing, curious, and excited as they went about their task. This was the fourth Sunday in a row they’d been out capturing this special place in the world on film, and so far there had been no fallings-xadout that she knew of. In fact, between them they had gathered some impressive footage of surfers riding the waves over at Rhossili Bay; the flighty dance of marram grass as the wind gusted over the dunes; entrancing close-xadups of old and young faces singing their hearts out in chapel; wild ponies roaming the vast open moors; golden plover, sanderlings, and little stints pecking and flitting about the wetlands; starfish, cockleshells, and feathers littering the shores . . . There was so much material now that Jenna could hardly remember it all. Today’s mission was all about local folklore, Viking raiders, the Arthurian legend, smugglers, dragons, and damsels in distress. If there was fog clinging to the rocks of the Worm’s Head, Jenna knew, Paige intended to whisper lines from Herbert New’s sonnet to accompany the haunting scene. Patient, folded wings; with lifted head, / Watchful, outlooking seawards sits the Form / Which, dragon-xadlike, defies the approaching storm . . .The project was for Paige’s ICT course—xadInformation and Communications Technology: Using your mobile phones, make a tourist video of the region to include everything you feel to be worthwhile.Jack was a big one for projects, sometimes seizing them as if they were his own until Paige—xador whichever child he was supposed to be assisting—xadpatiently, or occasionally hotly, reminded him that she was in charge.Jenna couldn’t help but smile at the way Jack tried to hide his hurt, or frustration, at being brought up short by his children, quickly covering it with pride that they were so gifted, or determined, or simply willing to learn from their own mistakes.“Dad, I’m fifteen, for God’s sake,” Jenna had heard Paige grumbling as they’d returned last Sunday. “You’re treating me like a baby.”“But you asked me to help,” he’d protested.“Help, yes, not take over. I need someone who’ll do as they’re told and maybe make suggestions if they’re relevant. Not someone who thinks they know everything.”“But I do.”Paige hadn’t been able to stop herself smiling at that. “But I’m the student,” she’d reminded him. “I have to learn, and sometimes that means getting it wrong, or finding my own way to the solution.”This kind of response invariably brought Jack’s eyes to Jenna’s—xadsuch clarity and wisdom in one so young.Paige had always loved to work things out for herself, whether a jigsaw puzzle as a toddler, new words in her storybooks as she started to read, or the complex challenges of the chemistry lab or maths class in school. These were the only two subjects at which she didn’t do quite so well. Even so, her eagerness to grasp what was eluding her made Jenna worry at times for how hard she drove herself.Still, she seemed well balanced, and had continued to thrive in spite of the life-xadchanging move Jenna and Jack had decided on just over a year ago. It had been one of their biggest worries at the time, how it would affect their teenage daughter to be plucked from the heart of everything and everyone she knew to begin a completely new life in a country she’d only ever visited for a couple of weeks each summer.Not such a very different country; after all, it was only Wales, where everyone, at least in their part, here on the Gower Peninsula, spoke English, and all the warnings of how insular and unwelcoming the Welsh could be to outsiders had proved total nonsense. Their neighbors could hardly be any friendlier, at least to them; the way they sometimes carried on with each other made Jenna wonder if she’d stumbled into the village of Llareggub, the infamous setting for Under Milk Wood.This was a favorite book of hers, and recently of Paige’s since it had become a set piece for her subject achievement exams, the GCSEs. As it was Dylan Thomas’s centenary year, the whole region was celebrating his life and works in one way or another, and Paige had been chosen by her English teacher to take the part of First Voice in a school production to be staged at the Dylan Thomas Centre in Swansea. Such an honor had never been bestowed upon a female student before, but Miss Kendrick was of the opinion that Paige’s understanding and enjoyment of the play made her such an obvious choice that she’d added Second Voice to the part as well. Since the casting Jenna and Paige had spent many hours listening to Richard Burton’s famous performance, taking it line by line, nuance by nuance, getting to the heart of why he’d spoken, whispered, or growled in a certain way, and what he might have been thinking when observing the many oddities of the characters in the piece.To say Paige was excited about taking this part was an understatement indeed. Drama was her thing; she loved to act, and this role was her biggest challenge yet. And she was going to be playing it not only in Wales but in Dylan Thomas’s hometown.As a family, they were loving being here, there was no doubt about that. In fact, in spite of not being Welsh—xadapart from through Jenna’s father—xadit felt as though they were exactly where they belonged. However, it hadn’t been their intention to move here after Jack had lost his job as the sales manager for a leading publisher. Their initial plan was for him to find another position in a similar field, but unfortunately it hadn’t worked out that way. The industry was suffering. Dozens if not hundreds of people had been laid off across the country, and competition for the few positions that did come up was fierce. After Jack had suffered through months of nothing but apologies and rejection, his notoriously volatile temper had collapsed into a horrible despair. He stopped attending interviews, found it hard to engage with the children, and even turned his back on the easy and passionate intimacy he and Jenna had always shared. Despite his tendency to overreact, it had unnerved her considerably to see how hard he was taking his failure to start again. When things were going his way he was ebullient, larger than life, ready to meet any challenge head on with a certainty that he’d win. Over that time she’d felt him slipping away, diminishing in spirit and hope, and it had scared her. The Jack she knew and loved was still in there, she’d remained convinced of that, but reaching him, bolstering him, and trying to make him believe in himself again had proved an almost impossible task.Then one day, without warning, he’d suddenly announced that they should relocate to Wales.Jenna remembered her jaw dropping.“We need a completely fresh start,” he’d insisted, “with something of our own. We don’t want to be at any other bastard’s beck and call. We’ll be our own bosses, answer only to each other, and when we start to expand, which we will, we’ll do all the hiring and firing.”Jenna hadn’t missed the way her highly successful, career-xaddriven sister and brother-xadin-xadlaw had exchanged glances at this unexpected development. She didn’t blame them, as she was skeptical too, but loyalty to Jack, combined with the overwhelming relief that he seemed so determined on this new start, made her say, “I think it’s a very interesting idea, but what kind of business do you have in mind?”“Publishing, of course,” he’d replied, as if there could be no other. “Given my own employment history, and yours as a published writer and respected freelance editor, it’s all we know, so we need to capitalize. And now, with the Internet, it’s never been easier. We can base ourselves anywhere, have a website as big as we like, and sell whatever we choose. No, wait,” he ran on as Hanna made to interrupt, “I’ve given it a lot of thought, and I reckon Wales is definitely the place to be. It’s a land full of poets, playwrights, novelists, you name it, and almost none are getting the recognition they deserve.”“Would there be a market for them?” his brother-xadin-xadlaw had asked dubiously.“Of course, if we present them in the right way. We won’t be like all these other Web-xadbased cowboys who make you pay to be published, then do nothing to promote the work. We’ll have a totally different approach that deals with only high-xadquality product—xadthat’s where you come in, Jen. You’ll be responsible for vetting the submissions and knocking the best ones into shape, and I’ll sort out the website and business plan. It shouldn’t be expensive to get off the ground, just the cost of designing the site and a few well-xadplaced ads . . . Local media interest is a given, and chances are we won’t even need to go to the bank for finance, which we probably wouldn’t get anyway given how tight they are these days. We can manage everything ourselves, provided we sell this house. OK, I know that sounds radical, but the market’s gone so crazy in London that it’s got to be worth at least three times what we paid for it by now, and it’s complete madness having it sitting there doing nothing when we could be making it work for us.”“But what about Paige?” Hanna asked, glancing worriedly at her niece.“I’m cool with it,” Paige assured her, apparently as carried away by the idea as her father was. “It’ll be an adventure.”Jenna simply watched as Jack pressed a kiss to their elder daughter’s forehead. “That’s my girl,” he laughed. “Never afraid to take a risk, and the younger ones will be fine. They’ll settle in no time at all.”“What about you, Jenna?” Hanna ventured.Deciding this wasn’t the time to argue, Jenna had simply said, “I might need a while to get my head round it, but in principle . . .” She shrugged. “Why not?”That was all it had taken for Jack to spring into action. In no time at all the house was on the market, a new business management team—xadrecommended by Hanna—xadhad assessed the project and helped to obtain funding from the Welsh Arts Council, and ads had gone into the local papers announcing the creation of a new e-xadpublishing venture, Celticulture.A little over a year later they were ensconced at the southern end of the Gower Peninsula in a ten-xadyear-xadold detached house designed to resemble a barn conversion, which had to be at least twice the size of the Victorian end-xadof-xadterrace they’d owned in London. Instead of a street full of stamp-xadsized gardens and tightly parked cars, they were at the top of a quaintly sprawled village, overlooking a wild grassy moor that stretched all the way out to Port Eynon Point, where the sea glittered and smudged into an ever-xadchanging horizon.It was idyllic; “God’s own country” was how Jack described it.“You mean the back end of beyond,” Paige sometimes grumbled, but if either Jack or Jenna called her on it, she’d quickly assure them she was only kidding.“It’s really cool,” she’d insist. “Different, and a bit weird in some ways, but I can do surfing and stuff here that I could never do in London, and I’m making loads of new friends.”This was true; she’d taken to her new surroundings far better than they’d dared hope, and clearly enjoyed her new school, The Landings. Her new best friend, Charlotte Griffiths, lived barely a mile away, while her other new best friend, Hayley, was in Reynoldston, which wasn’t far either. There were many others in their set, as they liked to call it: Lucy, Courtenay, Cullum, Ryan, Owen—xadJenna was losing track of them all now, but what mattered was how readily they had accepted Paige and how happy she seemed. She’d even started to develop a hint of a Welsh accent, which Jenna loved to hear. It was so musical and friendly, with playful little inflections that fluttered like tiny wings straight to the very core of her heart.Her Welsh father had never lost his accent, even after four decades of living in England.How badly she still missed him; she couldn’t imagine a time when she wouldn’t. If she concentrated hard enough, she was sure, she could hear him singing, telling stories, whispering comforting words when she needed them. She could see him working in the garden, dozing in his favorite armchair, delighting in his grandchildren, who absolutely adored him. One of the fondest, most moving memories she had of him was the way his face used to light up with surprise and joy when she’d drop in to visit without warning.“Ah ha!” he’d cry, his arms going out to wrap her up in the warmest, most wonderful hug in the world.Almost three years had passed since he’d been struck down with a heart attack. He hadn’t been ill, hadn’t even shown any signs of slowing up or mentioned he was feeling unwell. He’d simply collapsed one day at the office and had never come home. It was like a cruel magician’s trick: one minute he was there, the next he’d gone. She, Hanna, and their mother were still a long way from coming to terms with the loss.Thinking of him now, as she often did in quiet moments, she hoped that wherever he was, he knew that she was living in Wales. She could see his twinkly eyes shining with delight to realize that she’d returned to his roots. It would give him so much pleasure, especially since her mother had moved into a cottage at the heart of the village. Knowing him, he’d have wholeheartedly approved of Jack’s plans for the new business, and would probably even have got involved in some way if he could.Stirring as the next-xaddoor neighbors’ cat jumped down onto the lawn, circling the children’s trampoline, slide, and two-xadstory playhouse before disappearing over the wall into the moorland, Jenna glanced at the blank screen of her laptop and gave a sigh of dismay.“Take this time for yourself,” Jack had told her after depositing the younger children at their friends’ homes earlier, and before he and Paige had set off on their shoot. “We’ll be gone for a few hours, so sit with it, see what happens. I bet something will.”He was wrong. Nothing was happening at all.It never did these days, and she was annoyed with herself now for hoping that today might prove any different, when she knew very well that a creative flow couldn’t just be turned on and off like a tap.She was experiencing—xadsuffering would be a better choice of word—xada prolonged spell of writer’s block, though she deliberately didn’t call it that. She preferred telling herself that the story wasn’t quite ready to be told yet, or the characters were still making up their minds which directions to take. It would help, a lot, if she actually knew what the story was about—xador, more significantly, whom it was about—xadbut she really didn’t. It was as though she’d been abandoned by her own imagination. Actually, there was no “as though” about it—xadshe had been abandoned by her imagination. It had run for cover following the awful reviews for her last book, taking the best part of her confidence with it.However, blaming a handful of critics for a book that she’d known, even when she’d delivered it, wasn’t as good as her best-xadselling first was hardly going to help get her past this crisis. Nor was the fact that her agent had recently reminded her that the publisher would be asking for a return of the advance if she didn’t send something in soon.So here she was, facing the happy prospect of having to repay something in the region of twenty thousand pounds in the next couple of months unless she could come up with a synopsis at the very least. Since this wasn’t a sum she could possibly raise, and the only words she’d been able to conjure so far were “Chapter One,” things weren’t looking good.In truth, the situation might not have felt quite so desperate if they hadn’t spent virtually everything they had on setting up here. Jack’s severance pay, her advance, the small inheritance she’d received from her father, and most of the proceeds from their London house had all gone into creating their new life. She couldn’t deny they’d been extravagant, paying for the house outright, buying themselves a new car each—xada flashy coupe for her and Jack, a sturdy dog-xadand-xadpeople-xadcarrier for the family—xadand getting the children basically anything they wanted, including computers, iPads, iPhones, PlayStations, smart TVs, scooters, bicycles, and tree houses. There was even a jukebox in the sitting room, along with a pinball machine and a giant rocking horse Jack had won in a raffle. Jenna wasn’t sure how low their funds were running these days, but she suspected it was lower than Jack was ready to admit.“The business is due to launch in a month,” he’d reminded her only this morning, “at which point cash will start rolling in and we’ll be sitting pretty again. Better than that, we’ll be able to send a check to your publisher, leaving you free to write and deliver just when you want to. It’ll probably turn out to be exactly what you need to get the juices flowing. No more deadlines, no nasty phone calls—xadjust you, your characters, and all the time you could wish for to go on all the journeys you’re dreaming about.”Time—xada commodity virtually unknown to busy mothers, particularly those with three children under eight, each of whom had a character, set of needs, and schedule all their own, and a teenage live wire who’d lately started showing signs of a maturity that Jenna knew she should have been prepared for but wasn’t.Picking up her mobile as it bleeped with a text, she smiled to see the photo Jack had sent of Paige peering into a rock pool with her latest admirer, Owen Masters. Should I be jealous? Jack was asking.I don’t think so, Jenna texted back. Will tell you more when you get back. How’s it going?Shot enough for another feature film. Heading up to Arthur’s Stone now. How about you?How she longed to say she was on a roll, but even if she did, he’d know as soon as he looked into her eyes when he came back that it wasn’t true. Wondering if senna pods might help, she replied, and smiled as she imagined him laughing.A few minutes later the landline rang; glad of the excuse to leave her computer, she went through to the kitchen to answer.“Hi, it’s me,” her sister declared. “Hang on, sorry, I’ll be right with you.”Tucking the phone under her chin as she waited, Jenna reached for the kettle to fill it. How she loved this kitchen! What luxury it was to have so much space to cook and socialize and watch the kids come and go. The house was just perfect; she couldn’t love it more if she’d designed it herself, with its floor-xadto-xadceiling windows all across the back to take in the garden and the view beyond, its characterful reclaimed beams through most of the rooms, and the highly polished sandstone floors.The dining room was more like a conservatory off the kitchen, with French doors leading onto the garden, while the sitting room was her dream of how a sitting room should be, with an open stone fireplace at the far end, deep-xadcushioned sofas, tatty rugs, and endless clutter. The mess never bothered her; on the contrary, she rejoiced in it, which she knew was a reaction to all the years of having to live with her mother’s obsession with order. Trails of toys, shoes, books, crayons—xadeverything and anything—xadled off the sitting room into the playroom, and very often up the stairs to the bedrooms, where another sort of chaos reigned. Jenna and Jack’s master suite was to the left of the three-xadsided gantry landing and was almost never off-xadlimits. Josh’s room was next to theirs and was poised to become sleepover central just as soon as the painfully shy Josh plucked up the courage to invite more than one friend at a time. Paige’s own small suite was opposite and very definitely off-xadlimits. The twins’ room was next to Paige’s, with a pink half for Flora and a blue one for Wills. From the landing that ran across the tall back windows it was possible to look down into the sitting room or to stand gazing out at the mesmerizing view—xadif anyone had the time, which they rarely did.Even on gloomy days their house felt full of light, while on clear days it was possible to see all the way across the Channel to Exmoor. There was no sign of a distant land today, and hadn’t been since long before Christmas.“Are you there?” Hanna said breathlessly. “Sorry about that. The cat was on the windowsill. I thought she was about to jump. So how are you?”“Great. How about you?”“Frazzled, as usual. Got a deadline we have to meet by tomorrow. How’s the weather down there? It’s miserable here in London.”“It’s just started raining again.”Sighing, Hanna said, “That’s all it’s done for months. I pity those poor people who’ve been flooded. This must be a never-xadending nightmare for them.”“A couple of houses at the beach have lost their gardens,” Jenna told her. “Jack reckons their foundations too, but no one’s been in yet to check.”“That’s terrible. Are they holiday homes?”“Yes, I think so. Huge chunks of the seawall were smashed apart, so they didn’t stand a chance, and you should see the muck the tide’s washed up. The beach is like a rubbish dump at the moment. Anyway, I’m sure you didn’t ring to discuss that.”“You’re right, I didn’t. I’ve just spoken to Mum. Have you seen her today?”“No, but Jack dropped in on his way back from the shop this morning. She was all right then. Why do you ask?”“She’s just told me that she’s going to start taking in washing and ironing.”Jenna’s eyes twinkled.“I’ve no idea where this ridiculous idea has come from,” Hanna went on, “but I’m guessing she read it somewhere or maybe saw it on TV.”“She’s just started The Book Thief,” Jenna told her. “The foster mother’s a laundress who also has a foul mouth, so let’s hope no one round here speaks German.”“Oh, please no,” Hanna groaned. “Do you think she means it? She’s not really going to take in other people’s washing, is she?”Knowing how unlikely it was, Jenna grinned as she said, “I guess we’ll find out soon enough.”Hanna sighed. “Do you think we ought to get her to see someone?”“You won’t have forgotten what happened the last time we tried. . . .”“You mean the hunger strike?”“And it’s not as though there’s anything actually wrong with her.”“She’s just her own person,” Hanna said, quoting their father, “and maybe a little bit on the autism spectrum. If you ask me, she’s that, all right. Is she keeping to her diet?”“Religiously. Everything organic, gluten-xadfree, no refined sugars or artificial colorings . . . It takes forever going round the supermarket with her, and she’s always online ordering some supplement or other. God knows how much good it’s all doing.”“What matters to her is that Daddy put the diet together. She’ll be on it now till the day she dies—xador loses her marbles completely. Anyway, tell me about you. What’s new in your world?”As they chattered on, catching up on each other’s lives, as they often did on a Sunday, Jenna watched the rain growing heavier, pulling a thick gray veil between the moor and the sea. Fortunately, the wind was nowhere near as violent as it had been over the past few weeks; if it had been, there was no way Jack and Paige could have been out in it. During the worst of the storms they’d been forced to bring all the computers and company paperwork over to the house just in case their garden office got carried off by a particularly lively gust. Luckily, it had remained anchored to its spot, though a window had been smashed by a flying branch (already repaired by one of Jack’s mates from the pub), and the stone path leading across the grass to its door had been washed away twice (both times reinstated by Jack himself). Read more

Features & Highlights

  • For readers of Jodi Picoult, Heather Gudenkauf, and Elizabeth Flock comes a riveting and timely novel that delves into a modern family’s harrowing encounter with the complex world of cyberbullying.
  • Jenna Moore finally feels that she and her family are exactly where they should be. Leaving busy London behind, they’ve moved to the beautiful, serene Welsh coast. There Jenna, her husband, Jack, and the couple’s four children have found a little slice of heaven. In the house of their dreams, Jenna and Jack are ramping up for the launch of their new publishing business, and the kids are happier than they’ve ever been, wandering the wild, grassy moors that meet white sand beaches and wide ocean.   But a fissure cracks open. The once open and honest Jack suddenly seems to be keeping secrets, spinning intricate lies. And fifteen-year-old Paige has become withdrawn, isolating herself from her family and her new friends. Frightened of the darkness enveloping her family, Jenna struggles to hold her loved ones together. But a cruel disturbance has insinuated itself into her home, threatening to take away everything she holds dear.
  • Praise for Susan Lewis
  • “This emotionally charged story keeps you at the edge of your seat.”
  • —RT Book Reviews
  • ,
  • on
  • Behind Closed Doors
  • “Spellbinding . . . The atmosphere grows more intense with the turn of each page.”
  • —The Free Lance–Star
  • ,
  • on
  • No Child of Mine

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Reviews

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So bad it's almost good

This book was deliciously, appallingly bad, which is what made me read it with something approaching glee. It was soap operatic in its virtuosity, so predictable and overblown and melodramatic that I pretty much ate it up like it was candy for my brain. Two months from now I'll forget this book ever existed. So why the two star rating instead of one? That is due to me tipping my hat because despite its horrible flaws it kept me turning pages (thought I hate this term, I think the words "guilty pleasure" work quite well here), whereas one star ratings are reserved for books I found so awful I didn't derive any enjoyment. Some spoilers to follow.

First up: the characters. They're dreadful. Really, truly, sincerely awful. Every last one of them. They are so cliched and so poorly done that at no point did I ever forget I was reading a book--no danger here of that magical moment where the characters feel so real that you start thinking of them as people rather than fictional inventions. Each character fit a very specific role: the Other Woman, the philandering husband, the moody teenage daughter, the put-upon wife and mother, the eccentric mother-in-law whose quirks all other characters tolerate rather than ever attempting to understand or feel any real empathy for.

Jenna in particular was terrible. I couldn't stand her from the moment I started reading, when her overly sunny narrative told me quite clearly that she was delusional and setting herself up for one giant fall. I honestly despised her because she is so clueless and self-involved, yet the book made it quite clear I was supposed to like her and empathize with her. Over what? Her head-in-the-sand mentality that makes her unable to see what's going on in her own home? Her outrageous, over the top behavior when she finds out about her husband's philandering? Her failure to pay any attention to her daughter and notice the many warning signs of Paige's decline. There is a scene in which Jenna confronts her husband's mistress and physically assaults her, and is still somehow portrayed in a sympathetic light. What? I understand that she was angry, but the fact that she physically attacks others is so unacceptable I wanted to laugh at the thought I was supposed to feel sorry for Jenna and not the mistress.

The whole plot with the bullying was straight out of some made for TV movie. Bullying is a very serious issue that deserves serious consideration, but in this book it's pulpy melodrama. Pulpy melodrama is okay, and as long as a book like this isn't held up as one that does a serious job of addressing the problem of bullying, I'm okay with it. But by no means do I think it's fit for consideration as being read in order to inform a reader about bullying. I didn't find what happened to Paige far-fetched because severe bullying can be alarmingly violent, both physically and mentally. The problem was that I simply didn't think the author had the skill to treat the topic in a serious way. It doesn't help that Paige is such an uneven character, portrayed in one light at the beginning of the book but then veering from one extreme to another throughout. I think it's a good thing the book stopped before it got into the psychological impact the bullying had on Paige.

Perhaps the biggest problem this book has is that it deals with two huge plot elements and tries to weave them together, to the detriment of both. Jenna's crumbling marriage felt to me like it had been thrown in to give Jenna an excuse for missing her daughter's cries for help. I had the sense that the author worried Jenna would come across as too unsympathetic if she missed Paige's cries for help because she was too preoccupied with the mundane, so the author gave Jenna her own enormous drama to deal with. Plus, the cheating plot is so predictable it's visible from miles and miles away. The foreshadowing is done with such a heavy hand that it's not like gentle hints that put whispers of ideas in the reader's head, it's as if the "hints" are the OED being dropped straight on the reader's head.

There's more to this book, but suffice it to say I do believe I've hit all the high notes. I read it, I was entertained by the badness of it all, but there are so many good books out there waiting to be read that it's not one I would recommend in hindsight.
3 people found this helpful
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Secrets and problems

This is one of those complex family sagas that has quite a bit going on, and plenty of twists, turns, and reveals. When the Moore family moves to London they work on setting up their new business and getting their children settled in school. It quickly becomes apparent that not everything is as happy or as promising as it seems. The family has financial problems. One of the children is being bullied. Everyone has secrets. In many ways, this is your typical troubled, secretive family saga. It is well-written and engaging, though, and the plot is not predictable. When this sort of book is done well I really enjoy it, and I really enjoyed this one.
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A disappointment

I was drawn to this book because of its timely subject matter, online bullying and harassment. It does cover that subject in excruciating detail, but it has several flaws as well.

"Too Close to Home" is set in the south of England in the present day and centers around a family of six: Jenna and Jack, the parents; Paige, Jenna's teenage daughter by a previous relationship; and three younger children who are the offspring of Jenna and Jack. There are three major strands to the novel: Jenna and Jack's new business venture and its start-up struggles; Jack and Jenna's marriage and its breakdown after he is unfaithful; and Paige's difficulties at school with a "real-life" teenage bully and a mysterious online manipulator whose machinations are almost sociopathic. All of these strands are explored in great detail, and the book is overlong by at least 150 pages.

One problem with this book is the writing. Everything is spelled out very explicitly. It is as if the writer never heard the maxim, "Show, don't tell." This author "tells" everything, making obvious observations that are annoying and almost insulting to the reader. It is as if she does not trust the reader to draw even the most obvious conclusion for him or herself. Both the subject matter and the writing made me think that this is a YA novel, but it is not marketed that way. It is recommended for people who love Jodi Picoult, but my guess is that Picoult's fans will not be complimented by that recommendation.

The book explores the topic of cyberbullying in great detail, and if this topic interests you, you may enjoy this book. The characters, however, are two-dimensional; they never really come alive. For me, the book was a disappointment, though the topic is timely.
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One of Susan Lewis Best

I have read Susan Lewis before and really liked her writing in "Never Say Goodbye", "No Child of Mine". and "Behind Closed Door". They addressed family dynamics and social issues that were of interest to be being a social worker before retiring. I also had read several of her (what I call) romantic books but didn't find them as engaging and interesting as those mentioned above.

I haven't read any of her books for a couple of years and when I saw "Too Close to Home" for review on Vine Voice decided to ask for it. At first I thought it was going to be a "romantic" book. I hadn't read the synopsis so really had no idea what it was about. It wasn't long before I had a gut reaction to the storyline that told me this wasn't going to be a "romantic story. The social issue is bullying and that is about the only thing I will say in order not to ruin the story for those who haven't read the book yet. Page by page the dynamics of the Moore family are flushed out and relationships defined - Jenna, the mom, Jack the father, Paige, Jenna's teenage daughter, who Jack as adopted, Josh the oldest son and Flora and Wills, the twins. They seem so happy, and so human and so together. That description changes slowly and surely and the family starts to start crumbling.

Lessons from the story line are how important it is for family members to communicate with each other and to be able to trust that each other has the back of all the family members. Also, it is important to see the big picture and not get wrapped up with everyday routines instead of how your family members are acting and feeling.

The reader will be so drawn into all the emotions displayed in this book that they will find it hard to stop reading. While there were times when I wanted to scream "What are you doing?" or "Say something." I still felt the emotional responses of the characters. In fact, I cried through most of the last few chapters. This was one of Ms. Lewis' best books and I would highly recommend it.
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NEW SUSAN LEWIS FAN!

Cannot believe I've never read any Susan Lewis and am thrilled that she has written so many books that I can add to my list of "want to read it". From the beginning I was pulled in by how relatable all the characters were. I could actually feel the frenzy and stress that Jenna felt as she struggled to hold her family together while the life she knew and loved was falling apart. For sure a 5 star and I'm anxious to read more of her books.
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“is that no one’s family is as perfect as they might seem from the outside

Too Close to Home by Susan Lewis is a not one person’s story but the story of a family. It has multiple subplots that deal with difficult and serious issues such as bullying, marriage faithlessness, betrayal and deception. All these heavy subjects along with psychics and suicide added to the mix make it a serious read. I also had trouble getting into the story and identifying with the characters. However, as the story progressed I became more invested in the outcomes for the characters.

I really thought that the ending was going to be much sadder than it was. I have thought about Jenna’s comment, that there is much truth in it.

-“What she probably didn’t realize,” Jenna said, “is that no one’s family is as perfect as they might seem from the outside. Everyone has their issues.”

Perhaps that is the lesson for the reader. I was concerned that the only reference to a higher power was the “healing” for Owen. I’m not sure who was to do that but it sounded evil not good. On own on even the best of us can make a mess of life.

This is thought provoking woman’s fiction. It is written in a believable, no nonsense but well described manner. By the end I felt I knew these characters, wanting life to continue to improve for each of them, except for maybe Kelly and her family. They still seemed to believe it is money that covers a multitude of sins, which of course is a bunch of malarkey.

The publisher through Net Galley provided a copy.
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A great fiction read about a very real problem.

Too Close to Home took me a bit to get into. There was no great hook at the beginning. In the end I found it to be a really good read. It is a realistic story about the effects of bullying, especially cyberbullying, on a child and an entire family. I highly recommend this story for that reason. The main lesson I took from it is that children and teens should not be allowed to have computers in their rooms and need to have their electronic history monitored. It's easy to be lulled into a false sense of security because your child never gives you any problems. A great fiction read about a very real problem.
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Intense book about cyberbullying

Too Close To Home is about cyberbullying and how horrible it affects its victims. I found it very powerful and having never been bullied in school, I thought this was an interesting way of raising awareness of how awful it is. The characters were interesting to get to know, some I thought grew in a good way and others not so much. The story was good, but I felt that the bullying was way drawn out before Paige said anything but I guess that's how it is in real life. Unlike some books that have double points of view, where it's sometimes hard to tell who is narrating that section, with this book, I found the dual points of view were well done, you can clearly tell who the scene is about. I felt that it had a good solid ending, there was nothing leaving me hanging. I would recommend this book to people who are curious of cyberbullying or for those who would like to know what it might feel like for the person experiencing bullying.

Rating on book content:
There were a whole bunch of 'f-words’ and other language in Paige’s sections. A lot of the texts that Paige got were sexually suggestive.
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Intense book about cyberbullying

Too Close To Home is about cyberbullying and how horrible it affects its victims. I found it very powerful and having never been bullied in school, I thought this was an interesting way of raising awareness of how awful it is. The characters were interesting to get to know, some I thought grew in a good way and others not so much. The story was good, but I felt that the bullying was way drawn out before Paige said anything but I guess that's how it is in real life. Unlike some books that have double points of view, where it's sometimes hard to tell who is narrating that section, with this book, I found the dual points of view were well done, you can clearly tell who the scene is about. I felt that it had a good solid ending, there was nothing leaving me hanging. I would recommend this book to people who are curious of cyberbullying or for those who would like to know what it might feel like for the person experiencing bullying.

Rating on book content:
There were a whole bunch of 'f-words’ and other language in Paige’s sections. A lot of the texts that Paige got were sexually suggestive.
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Complex book of today's problems with teenagers and parents that is true to today's society ! ! !

I really liked this book, even though the subject matter was very dark & could be depressing. It is the first Susan Lewis book that I have read, and I will be reading others of hers now too. There were plenty of twists and turns to this novel, and it is spot on, to today's family problems and dilemmas with school children, bullying and groups of bad girls or boys who team up and pick on certain people, for no specific reason at all. The problem with the dad and husband are also right into what happens at the work place and the mother and wife sure has her hands full trying to deal with the whole family. I was shocked at where this book led to towards the end and felt a true connection to the teenage daughter and her internet choices. This was a complex book that kept me reading and did not lose my interest. I was surprised to read other reviews and felt that some were not correct at all. Susan Lewis has me as a new reader now of her books!