Rothschild skillfully peels back the layers not only of Tom's grief following his family's death, but the ever-present bereavement within his marriage as he and Honor attempted to create a family to begin with. The epic scope and emotional range of Finding Grace is impressive for any novelist, let alone a debut author, and is made all the more noteworthy here in Rothschild's choice of narrator: the dead Honor ... Through Honor's omniscient understanding of Tom's behavior, readers witness a complicated family structure emerge. While this exact situation is atypical, the context gives Rothschild fertile ground for exploring the many shapes a family can take, and all that parenting asks of us as individuals and as a community ... Rothschild builds a novel that hurtles toward a desperate and inevitable conclusion without rushing past the emotions that give the book its heart. Complex and layered, Finding Grace is a stunning debut that is as tense as it is tender, perfectly executed from jarring start to a shocking, emotional finish. Asking more questions than it answers, Rothschild's work will be a darling for book club discussions, though readers will want to be sure to read with an open mind—and tissues nearby.
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