THE CHILD by Fiona Barton: Book Review
Who is the mother of the child whose corpse is found years after its burial? There are four women in The Child, and each one has a story to tell.
The novel begins with Emma, a forty-something woman with a history of mental illness. Married to a wonderful man and employed as an editor for celebrity memoirs, she constantly relives a past that threatens to overwhelm her.
Kate is a journalist at the Daily Post, a London newspaper, always looking for the next story. A small piece from a competing paper catches her eye with its headline “Baby’s Body Found.” She believes she has found the big scoop she is looking for in the piece about a baby’s skeleton unearthed while contractors were demolishing old houses.
Angela is getting ready for March 20th, the anniversary of the day her newborn daughter was taken from her room at the hospital, never to be seen again. It’s been decades since the abduction, and she’s married with two other children, but of course she’s never forgotten the infant she’d had for less than twenty-four hours.
Jude is Emma’s mother, a single mother with her own emotional problems. She and her daughter once had a close relationship, but that ended when Jude met Will and determined that he was more important to her than her own daughter. After years of separation, the mother and daughter have reconciled, but their tenuous, tense relationship always leaves one or both unhappy or angry.
The book follows the paths of these four women over a period of a week. The story of the Building Site Baby has grabbed Kate, and she gets permission from her reluctant editor to go to the run-down neighborhood where the corpse was found and try to interview any people still living there who had been residents at the time the baby was believed to have been buried.
The Child is Fiona Barton’s second mystery, and two of the characters appeared in The Widow as well, both in the same jobs they held in the earlier novel. At a farewell function for a fellow journalist, Kate sees Bob Sparkes, a police detective she met while covering another story. She tells him about her interest in the baby, and Bob is quickly drawn into the story because of his own interest in missing children. Now, hoping for some assistance from the police, Kate is even more eager to find out the truth about the infant who has been buried for years.
Fiona Barton was a journalist in London for many years, and on her website she says that the ideas for both The Widow and The Child came from news stories she’d read. In both novels she has taken the painful subjects of domestic abuse and child kidnapping and turned them into beautifully written, suspenseful thrillers with believable characters whose painful secrets and emotional problems will grip the reader from the first page.
You can read more about Fiona Barton at her website.
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