



Heart is a Star
A Novel
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Dive into the heart of Australia with this blockbuster debut as one woman confronts her past, family secrets, and her own identity amid the chaos of midlife, offering a poignant exploration of love, loss, and self-discovery.
Layla Byrnes is exhausted. She's juggling a demanding job as an anesthesiologist, a disintegrating marriage, her young kids, and a needy lover. And most particularly she's managing her histrionically unstable mother, who repeatedly threatens to kill herself.
But this year, it's different. When her mother calls just before Christmas, she doesn't follow the usual script. Instead, she tells Layla that there's something she needs to tell her about her much-loved father. In response, Layla drops everything to rush to her childhood home on the wild west coast of Tasmania. She's determined to finally confront her mother - and find out what really happened to her father - and lay some demons to rest.
The Heart is a Star is an engrossing, lyrical and powerfully absorbing novel about the complicated and beautiful messiness of midlife; about the ways in which we navigate an intricate, complicated world; and about how we can uncover our true selves when we are forced to face the myths that make us.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Australian writer Rogers's arresting debut centers on a stressed-out anesthesiologist dealing with romantic and family drama. Layla Byrnes is on unpaid leave from her Melbourne hospital following a patient's death while in her care. Her husband, Gabe, blames her dedication to work for his infidelity, and she's taken a lover who wishes he could have more of her. Meanwhile, her mother, Nora, threatens to kill herself, prompting Layla to visit her in Tasmania, where Layla grew up. Nora also threatens to reveal the awful truth about Layla's father, Oscar, who drowned on a rescue mission years earlier, and with whom Layla was very close. The novel starts out strong, with beautiful writing and fascinating characters, but falters in its later pages with revelations meant to excuse Nora's behavior. Still, Rogers excels at recontextualizing events of the past, as Layla sifts through happy memories and sees them in a darker light, and the story of Layla's troubles with the men in her life reaches a satisfying conclusion. Readers will be enamored.