Ratings33
Average rating3.4
This book is just based on cheating and secret affairs between the siblings. For one of the siblings to suicide and the reason being revealed at the END of the book should've been something that would've made me scream in my bed at 3am, but it was quite a disappointment. I expected more of this book when reading it. I was really curious about many parts of the story as it had unfold. This wasn't bad but not good either :/
This is the story of a dysfunctional family who has gone through a lot. It's about trauma, weird relationships, mental illness, the way family is tied together, & how the actions of one family member affect everyone in the family. I thought each character was well fleshed out, and they all had their own baggage to work through.
As always, I love the way Lisa Jewell writes in multiple timelines and perspectives. We got to follow the thoughts and actions of all family members and see parts of their life for a 20-30 year period.
I think people don't talk about this one that much because it's definitely a family drama & not a thriller like most of Lisa Jewell's more recent & popular books. But it's one you don't want to miss!
Okay, so Lisa Jewell has obviously left romantic chick lit behind and is now a Serious Novelist, writing about dysfunctional families and the like. The House We Grew Up In kept me turning the pages in a kind of horrified fascination. The family's matriarch is a hoarder who lives in denial of her own problem and of any issues that don't match her illusion of a perfect, happy family. The results are disastrous for her children , including suicide, familial desertion, drug dealing, nervous breakdown and my ultimate Ick Factor, a sibling who sleeps with her sister's partner. I kept waiting for the deep, dark secret that would explain everything, but Jewell doesn't take the easy way out. Yes, there are some contributing factors, but there is no single episode that triggers the pathology, nor are there villains and heroes. It's all very messy yet somehow in the end there is hope that the survivors will move on as a closer family unit.
I still miss Jewell's romances, but this was much heartfelt and cohesive than her last novel, Before I Met You.