Wall of Silence opens with the point of view of a child who stabbed a family member ... their father, Patrick.
All three siblings stick together and refuse to tell who did it. The family seemed perfect, and everyone in the community is stunned at this awful event. Melissa, the mother of the children is the one who came upon her husband surrounded by the children. Her devotion to Patrick and her children brings her to the brink of despair when the police deem it an attempted murder.
All three siblings stick together and refuse to tell who did it. The family seemed perfect, and everyone in the community is stunned at this awful event. Melissa, the mother of the children is the one who came upon her husband surrounded by the children. Her devotion to Patrick and her children brings her to the brink of despair when the police deem it an attempted murder.
This book kept me wondering just who stabbed Patrick. Surprisingly, her children are not evil, and all of them are tortured by the event. Yet all three keep a tight hold on what really happened. Melissa, the mother, is the main character. I admired the way she protected her children while searching for answers.
The child at fault chimes in from time to time with more insight into the awful event, (though I still wasn’t sure who this child is.) At times I wondered if it was one of the children after all. Was it an adult the kids are covering for? Was it someone else in the family, or someone else in the tight-knit community?
Even with the father finally waking from a coma, and telling who plunged the knife into him, the answers remain unclear.
I was grabbed by the throat, heart, and mind upon the the first few sentences, and never released until the last page of this book.
First sentences of Wall of Silence:
I thought Dad’s blood would smell of him, that soft citrus scent I’ve known all my life. But all I can smell on my hands are bitter pennies.
I look down on his face. He’s so white, so quiet.
Is this really happening?
5 stars
Wow! What a stunning premise. Great review!
ReplyDeleteIt's such a good book. Among my faves now.
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