A politician on trial for murder is facing the loss of her stature in Parliament and her reputation may be destroyed forever.
Emma Webster is an MP who has been campaigning hard for new laws to protect against revenge porn and other abusive acts against women. Every time she appears in the news, she has to read horrific tweets and posts about herself -- and most of them involve violent suggestions or hints about acts that make her anxious and fearful for her safety. Finding someone to trust has been difficult since her divorce, but she is determined to make sure that her 14-year-old daughter, Flora, is protected. When events conspire to bring Emma face to face with the biggest threat to her reputation, she fights back.
Unfamiliar as I am with British court, law, and the role of the MP, I still managed to find this story compelling and timely. Tired of all the misogyny in many aspects of life, I wasn't quite sure where this story was going to go. I rounded down from 3.5 stars because much of the prose seemed to ramble and was a bit repetitive with so many questions about things that were happening and never feeling that Emma was a reliable narrator. The sections told from the point of view of Emma, Caroline, and Flora were sometimes at odds and I just wanted to get to the truth of the matter so I could decide how I felt about everything that happened. Given my extreme dislike for tabloid journalism, most social media, and politicians in general, I was really finding it hard to pick a side. What struck me hardest is that there's no question in my mind that women always get the worst backlash in every situation. They are harassed, trolled, ridiculed, saddled with unrealistic expectations of behavior and reactions, and objectified in ways that no man has to experience.
Every woman knows fear -- and it seems that nothing has changed to make things safer. Women are held to a different standard and, despite all the efforts, I have not seen much change. So, the social issues within this novel dramatize how women are perceived and damaged in overt and subtle ways. It is part family and social drama, includes courtroom scenes, and not really a thriller but more a psychological study. It boils down to this -- how much could any life stand up to intense scrutiny and how important is it what others think of us.
Thank you to NetGalley and Atria/Emily Bestler Books for this e-book ARC to read and review.
This is a standalone and is not part of any series.
Genre - topical fiction, psychological
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