Truth of the Matter by Jamie Beck

Truth of the Matter (Potomac Point, #2)

by Jamie Beck

Starting over means looking back for a mother and daughter on the road to reinventing themselves in a moving novel about family secrets and second chances by Wall Street Journal bestselling author Jamie Beck.

Seventeen years ago, two pink stripes on a pregnancy test changed Anne Sullivan’s life. She abandoned her artistic ambitions, married her college sweetheart before graduation, and—like the mother she lost in childhood—devoted herself to her family. To say she didn’t see the divorce coming is an understatement. Now, eager to distance herself from her ex and his lover, she moves with her troubled daughter, Katy, to the quaint bayside town of Potomac Point, where she spent her childhood summers.

But her fresh start stalls when the contractor and onetime love interest renovating her grandparents’ old house discovers a vintage recipe box containing hints about her beloved grandmother’s hidden past. Anne is drawn into exploring the mysterious clues about the woman whose memory is fading, while also helping her daughter manage a rocky adjustment to a new school. When uncovered secrets shatter past beliefs, each woman must confront her deepest fears in order to learn it’s never too late to live her best life.

Reviewed by Jeff Sexton on

5 of 5 stars

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Messier And More... Real. Beck continues to show the true strength of her storytelling in her sophomore effort in the women's fiction genre after breaking out from exclusively writing romances. And here, she brings quite likely her most real - and messiest - story to date. Life is full of complications, and while Beck tends to bring some of them out even in her romances, here we get a much more real look at just how messy things can be - and an intergenerational tale of struggling to be yourself even when others tell you not to. One of - if not *the* - Beck's strongest works to date. Very much recommended.

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  • Started reading
  • 10 September, 2020: Finished reading
  • 10 September, 2020: Reviewed