To keep her children safe, she must put their lives at risk …
In suburban Australia, Mim and her two children live as quietly as they can. Around them, a near-future world is descending into chaos: government officials have taken absolute control, but not everybody wants to obey the rules.
When Mim’s husband Ben mysteriously disappears, Mim realises that she and her children are in great danger. Together, they must set off on the journey of a lifetime to find Ben. The government are trying to track them down, but Mim will do anything to keep her family safe – even if it means risking all their lives.
Can the world ever return to normality, and their family to what it was?
This was a bit hit and miss. There are some aspects of the story that are brilliant, and scary, and very, very human. Mim is a great main character and her fear for her children and her need to keep them safe are really relatable.
The future world in which she lives feels, unfortunately, very real, and it isn’t hard to imagine things going the way they have in her life – with the government taking over everything, tracking every move, and those who don’t fit being sent off to ‘BestLife’ facilities. It’s all very eerily believable.
The novel moves at a pace to begin with and is very dramatic and exciting. but once Mim is at sea, it all slows down a great deal and the details about the technicalities of sailing drag the story down, unfortunately.
When Mim is back to tracking her husband, the pace picks up again, and the ending is really good, very exciting and fast-paced.
While there was, in my opinion, too much detail of the intricacies of sailing, there were other aspects of the story that I felt didn’t get the depth they needed. There were hints that Mim was frustrated and unhappy at home, that things in her marriage weren’t all they appeared, and I felt this could have been explored a little more, as could the relationship she had with her brothers. I do thin this would have helped me to care more about Mim, and what happened to her.
So definitely worth a read, but not quite as gripping as I’d hoped – but I’d certainly read more by this author.

Sounds promising, Olga. I recently read a book by a colleague that also involved a lot of sailing – I’ll bet the author sails. It’s hard not to get lost in the terms and jargon!
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My apologies, ALISON! This is the fourth book review I’ve read this morning and I am getting people mixed up!!!
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No worries, Noelle 🙂 I think the author’s research into sailing overtook her a bit!
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Thanks, Alison
Wearing out readers with minutia, etc. is another reason every writer needs a good editor. The times I have deserved and received a virtual dope-slap are reminders that my editor is doing her job.
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Exactly what an editor should be doing, Chuck!
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