Intersections
A Novel
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3.8 • 21 Ratings
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
For fans of Emma Straub and Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeny, a debut contemporary women’s fiction novel about obsession, forgiveness, and friendship between two unlikely people.
Style-guru Charlotte Oakes sells beautiful lifestyles, but her mentally ill daughter is an addict, her long marriage is dead, and she is pregnant with her ex-lover’s baby. Stunned after witnessing a hit-and-run in Chicago that leaves a child dead, Charlotte thinks she sees her Prius fleeing the scene. Her troubled daughter, Libby, is the only one who could have been driving.
His partner and best friend killed in a drug bust, police officer Ed Kelly learns that forensics has found that the fatal bullet came from Ed’s gun. Under internal investigation, Ed copes by filming cars at the site of the recent hit-and-run, hoping to catch the child’s killer. There, he notices Charlotte’s pilgrimages to the makeshift memorial, and over the weeks, the two become unlikely friends sharing intimate stories. But Charlotte won’t trust him with her most vulnerable secret of all: her suspicions about her daughter’s involvement in the accident.
When Ed finally learns the truth about the accident, he struggles with his beliefs and duties. If he keeps quiet, he has breached his commitment to the law. But if he does the right thing as an officer, he may send Libby to jail—and lose Charlotte.
Customer Reviews
Didn’t love it
I related to Charlotte in the sense that I have adult children and children still at home and both are challenging and wonderful and scary and worrying and amazing- all at the same time. I’ve also been married for a very long time, but I have never- and would never-relinquished complete control to anyone where my happiness, values, boundaries, and goals are concerned. If Charlotte wanted more connection with her husband, she should have met him halfway. If she wanted her daughter to respect her more then she should have set those boundaries. Instead she blamed her husband for their disconnect and for the way her daughter treated her. I just didn’t relate to any of that.