![]() ![]() – A Fatal Inversion has a terrific narrative construction when it comes to weaving past and present together, and I’ll be sure to go back to this book to see in further details how Barbara Vine can “open a window” into the past of a character mid-sentence, just in a few words. – Barbara Vine (a pseudonym for Ruth Rendell) explores how guilt (or simply the moral burden of a crime) can change a person’s life over the years– how these young people who participated, to some degree, to a murder at a still “innocent” age seemingly got away with it, but now live in fear, escape reality through alcohol or have seen their ambitions dramatically change after this defining moment. – It’s a slow book narrated by the 3 males protagonists, and you need time to come to terms with those unlikable characters, but the suspense never fails to work: who is this woman and whose child is it? – When the new owners of Wyvis Hall discover the remains of a woman and a child buried in the woods, the memory of the events leading to the tragedy come back to haunt the few people who lived there ten years before, in 1976, for a summer-long free-love commune. ![]() ![]() Keeping it short will probably help keeping the suspense intact. It’s a personal challenge to try and review Barbara Vine’s Fatal Inversion in just about 5 sentences, although I could also write it in 4 words: I warmly recommend it! But here you go, me trying to catch up with my TBR pile and my “read but not yet reviewed” pile. ![]()
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