By taking care to make Heron a likable character, and by reducing to a distant memory, uncovered in the present, the years of hiding birthday cards, avoiding questions and lying through his teeth, the novel pulls its punches. I didn’t believe that the characters would behave as they did, and so I didn’t feel their pain or their catharsis as deeply as I should have ... Though elegant on the sentence level and important as a message of warning, A Family Matter is ultimately too gentle to deliver its awful blow.
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