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The Playground

The Playground Book Cover The Playground
Jane Shemilt
Fiction
HarperCollins
December 30, 2019
Paperback
384
Publisher

Over the course of a long, hot summer in London, the lives of three very different married couples collide when their children join the same tutoring circle, resulting in illicit relationships, shocking violence, and unimaginable fallout. There’s Eve, a bougie earth mother with a well-stocked trust fund; she has three little ones, a blue-collar husband and is obsessed with her Instagrammable recipes and lifestyle. And Melissa, a successful interior designer whose casually cruel banker husband is careful not to leave visible bruises; she curates her perfectly thin body so closely she misses everything their teenage daughter is hiding. Then there’s Grace, a young Zimbabwean immigrant, who lives in high-rise housing project with her two children and their English father Martin, an award-winning but chronically broke novelist; she does far more for her family than she should have to. As the weeks go by, the couples become very close; there are barbecues, garden parties, a holiday at a country villa in Greece. Resentments flare. An affair begins. Unnoticed, the children run wild. The couples are busily watching each other, so distracted and self-absorbed that they forget to watch their children. No one sees the five children at their secret games or realize how much their family dynamics are changing until tragedy strikes. The story twists and then twists again while the three families desperately search for answers. It’s only as they begin to unravel the truth of what happened over the summer that they realize evil has crept quietly into their world. But has this knowledge come too late?

My review:

There was a lot I liked about this book, and a few troublesome spots. First what worked. This starts off slowly but gets very unsettling shortly thereafter when things start happening to the children of the three couples we follow. Brought together by a tutoring class for dyslexic kids, the parents and children all become friends, or so they think. Pretty much everyone in the book is giving off some weird vibes at one point or another, so you are on edge anticipating what is going to come down next. I loved how it kept me on my toes, but that brings me to what didn't work. I'm not good at figuring out any thriller twists, but I saw the big one here coming from a mile (or in this case, not even a third of the book) away. The good part was that there was still plenty of things that needed to be resolved to keep me turning pages, but I was disappointed that I caught on so quickly. The only other problem I had in the beginning was keeping track of who belonged to which family. There were 6 adults and (I think) 7 kids which was a lot when they were coming and going into and out of each other's homes.

Overall I liked this one, it was unsettling but not scary. I found the writing really moved the story along and the characters and setting were well described. If you can keep track of who is who from the beginning, I think you will enjoy it.

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