Three friends tackle issues of grief, work, and romance in Slater’s novel.
Set largely along Boston’s South Shore and Cape Cod, the story follows three longtime friends, Maeve, Lizzie, and Hadley, over the course of a single summer marked by matrimony, professional upheaval, and unresolved romantic histories. Maeve, a widowed publicist still quietly grieving her husband’s death (“Their wedding seems like yesterday, even though he’s been dead for four years”), is the novel’s most grounded presence. Her sense of control begins to unravel when she’s passed over for a long-anticipated promotion in favor of Pope Morris, a charming outsider who eventually proves to be more than just a co-worker to Maeve. Lizzie, recently divorced and fiercely competitive, measures her self-worth through her achievements and desirability, and she wrestles with her on-again, off-again relationship with Wade (a former lover, not her ex-husband) throughout the novel. Hadley appears to have achieved the life she’s always wanted, complete with a lavish wedding and a devoted husband, but even her happiness begins to fray during her honeymoon, revealing anxieties about control, intimacy, and the future. Slater writes in a brisk, conversational style that captures both the humor and quiet ache of her characters’ inner lives. The dialogue is sharp, the social observations are astute, and the coastal setting effectively reinforces the novel’s themes of nostalgia and transition. While the romantic entanglements occasionally veer toward the familiar, the emotional stakes remain grounded, particularly in the depiction of female friendship as a sustaining force. Ultimately, the novel succeeds less as a conventional romance than as a thoughtful exploration of women navigating grief, ambition, and reinvention. The author resists easy resolutions—the future of one of the friends remains unresolved even at the end of the book—allowing her characters to remain flawed, uncertain, and human. The result is an engaging, emotionally intelligent novel well suited for readers drawn to relationship-driven fiction that might mirror their own lives from time to time.
An observant and often witty portrait of adulthood in transition.