Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Sleepwalking in Daylight by Elizabeth Flock

Sleepwalking in Daylight is told by two characters. A mother in a loveless marriage and a daughter who is emotionally lost. Both character's lives are spiraling out of control. The main characters are well developed and each likable in their own ways. The story is mesmerizing and plausible. Expect to find yourself sympathizing with both characters. The ending leaves you unsatisfied it seems almost forced. Flock will keep you intrigued. 

Grade: A

Synopsis Once defined by her career and independence, stay-at-home mom Samantha Friedman finds that her days have been reduced to errands, car pools and suburban gossip. What was an easy decision for Sam years ago has become a nagging awareness that this life was her choice. Now she deals with a husband who shows up for dinner but is too preoccupied for conversation, and a daughter swathed in black clothing and Goth makeup who won't talk at all. Believing she's an adopted mistake, seventeen-year-old Cammy has fallen into sex and drugs and pours herself into a journal filled with poetry and pain. On parallel paths, mother and daughter indulge in desperate, furtive escapism—for Sam, a heady affair with her supposed soul mate, fueled by clandestine coffee dates and the desire to feel something; for Cammy, a secretive search for her birth mother punctuated by pills, pot and the need to feel absolutely nothing.

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