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Sunday, June 23, 2024

LADYKILLER

3.5 stars out of 5

Despite an abundant supply of truly unlikable, mostly unrelatable characters, this story grabbed me from the beginning and enticed me to hang in there right to the end - if only to see which of them finally got their comeuppance. Then I got to the end, and well, that didn't exactly happen - quickly deflating my bubble of anticipation.

But let's back up: Central to the story are Abby and Gia, who became best friends as children at Gia's family home in Greece. When they were mostly grown, some kind of tragedy occurred during the summer before college that resulted in a bit of a rift between them. Abby ended up in Atlanta after finishing law school, but the two haven't been close in recent years. Abby is surprised, then, to be invited to a fancy resort in Sweden to help Gia celebrate her 30th birthday and see her younger brother Benny and, most important, her new husband, Garrett. Given Gia's custom of going off the rails whenever and wherever she is, Abby is taken aback - but not surprised - to learn they married within a scandalously short time after meeting each other.

Besides the party, Gia is preparing to sell the family home - mostly out of financial necessity; she's still rolling in dough, but the inheritance left by her late father is meager is comparison to the amount he gave away so it won't last forever. Amid all this, Gia says she's decided to write another memoir (her first book was a modest success). The manuscript, which reflects major events in Gia's life, then becomes chapters in this book that are interspersed with snippets from Abby's perspective. Soon, it becomes clear that much of the plot hinges on what awful thing happened that summer more than a decade ago mingled with the awful goings on in Gia's newly married life. And for sure, there's a lot - including a mysterious couple and an abundance of fairly graphic sex scenes (I offer this as a warning to those who don't like to read about such things).

Gia's birthday party, meantime, takes a surprising turn; when Abby and Benny arrive, in fact, Gia isn't there. They get no response at first to text messages and calls to Gia in Greece, followed by messages from Gia that don't quite ring true. Something's gone wrong for sure, so Abby and Benny head for Greece in hopes of setting matters straight - with Abby continuing to hope her friends never find out what really happened in that summer long ago. As an aside, I'll note that readers learn the truth - which in my opinion turned out to be much ado about nothing.

Of course, the story is more complicated than that - but you'll have to read it for yourself to find out the details. There are several interesting and, dare I say, dangerous twists, though most didn't come as a big surprise to me. What WAS surprising is how gullible an otherwise worldly grown woman can be. Then came that ending, which I eagerly approached thinking all the loose ends would be tied up. But that was not to be, leaving me disappointed (but with a vague thought that perhaps there's a sequel in the works).

Still, there's plenty to like here, so overall I'm happy for the opportunity to read and review a pre-release copy (for which I thank the publisher, via NetGalley). 

Ladykiller by Katherine Wood (Bantam, July 2024); 368 pp.

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