Member Reviews

Thanks to Netgalley and Harlequin Australia for an Advanced copy of this book to review . My first book by Fiona Lowe and I will be reading her back catalogue and anything else she writes in the future . I just loved everything about this book . The writing style , plot and characters . It has me hooked from the start. Many little things to learn and think about from Fiona’s characters . A 5 star read !

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This is a terrific book. Weird but engrossing.
Two best friends and their lives entwined with one family who share all.
Twin sister and the mother’s secrets.
When the truth comes out about the best friend and her child it will destroy friendships, family and their life in a small town.
I loved this book. Looking forward to reading more from Fiona Lowe. She had a great knack of hiding the twists as I wasn’t totally sure where it was going till it happened. Thankyou

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Thank you Netgalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read this book for an honest review.

Thank you Fiona Lowe for writing this incredible story of friendship ,betrayal ,loss and eventually redemption . I could not put this book down and at times was crying along with the characters. . This book will get under your skin and you will be thinking about it long after you have finished reading it. Read his book you will not be disappointed.

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Just An Ordinary Family is the fourth novel under the Australian Sagas banner by award-winning Australian author, Fiona Lowe. Thirty-three-year-old GP Libby Hunter has had, except for one tragic event, a charmed life. She’s happily married to the wonderful Nick Pirelli, has two beautiful daughters, a lovely home and a successful medical practice in the small summer tourist mecca of Kurnai Bay.

Alice Hunter is Libby’s slightly-younger, completely-unexpected twin. Alice has always lived somewhat in Libby’s shadow, having none of her charm, her self-assuredness, her single-minded determination or focus. Alice is artistic, and often seems dreamy and vague. And since she lost her job, her home and her boyfriend, she’s back from Melbourne, living with her parents, doing menial casual work and feeling rather directionless.

Despite their very different characters, the twins were, understandably, best friends. Until, that is, Jess Dekic turned up at Kurnai Secondary College when they were thirteen. Jess was confident and exciting, and had just a hint of danger about her, something Libby couldn’t resist. The firmest of best friends ever since, Libby will not hear a word of criticism against Jess, reminding everyone just how admirable Jess’s rise from her difficult childhood has been.

Now-single mum of sweet little Leo, Jess, too, is back in Kurnai Bay. Libby is thrilled to have her best friend close by, sharing child-care, social outings and their deepest thoughts, feelings and fears. But not everyone quite so delighted by Jess’s constant presence.

Karen Hunter has always tried to protect her twins, and to give them the unconditional love she was denied during her childhood. But now, as the bombshell hits, she watches as one of her daughters, painfully trying to find a way forward through her anguish, transforms into a controlling, vindictive creature she barely recognises.

“The Apocalypse” does not just change her daughter, it polarises the town: “It had been years since something this sensational had electrified the town and it would grease the rumour mill for months until someone else made a spectacular mess of their life worthy of frantic feasting by the gossip vultures.”

And the person on whom so much blame is laid? A psychopath, or simply the product of poor upbringing that left them with disordered thinking and values, “floundering in a moral and ethical morass when it came to the responsibilities inside friendships and intimate relationships”?

The back-cover blurb is a tiny bit misleading but more cannot be said without including spoilers. Lowe’s tale manages to include many themes, both topical and age-old: online dating, sexting, single parenting, infidelity, friends-with-benefits, infertility, menopause, stillbirth, cancer, friendship and loyalty, love, trust, betrayal, grief and forgiveness all feature, and the comparison to Jodi Picoult’s work is certainly valid.

If the plot has some predictable aspects, the journey through a year in Kurnai Bay is, nonetheless, one to savour, and Lowe‘s portrayal of the Bay will resonate with anyone who has experienced the claustrophobia of a small tourist town with its inherent lack of privacy.

Fiona Lowe’s latest novel is an excellent read with an authentic Aussie flavour. Her characters are thoroughly relatable and believably flawed, making poor decisions and plagued by secrets and guilt. Lowe throws her protagonists a number of challenges, the sort that might confront any ordinary family, and then lets the reader observe their reactions from several perspectives. A thought-provoking piece of contemporary fiction that will stay with readers long after the last page is turned.
This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by Better Reading Preview and HQ Fiction Australia.

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