Cover Image: The Affair

The Affair

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Member Reviews

Thank you to Netgalley for the opportunity to read this book as an arc.
Nina is horrified to learn that her 15 year old daughter Scarlett is pregnant by an older man. However, Scarlett is determined to protect her older lover and won't disclose his identity.
This is a very interesting read, it examines the dynamics of family life along with issues of teenage traumas, and at the core is the way one person can exert control over another's life. Scarlett begins to question just why she is protecting the man and who really does have her best interests at heart.
This is extremely thought provoking and addresses some current themes, I would definitely recommend this book.

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The Affair is certainly a very compelling read which touches a subject many parents must dread. Fifteen year old Scarlett is pregnant and refuses to say who the father is beyond that he's a married man. Her mother, Nina, has just started to settle into married life with her second husband Bryn and apart from dealing with the usual teenage truculence from Scarlett and her older brother Liam, she had thought her life was going well. Suddenly her world seems to be spiralling out of control. The book tells the story from the points of view of Nina and Vikki who is married to Scarlett's teacher and is one of the men Nina suspects could be the father. There are also diary style extracts by Scarlett herself and through these we find out a bit more about what has really been going on -although even within the pages of her diary, she is keeping her secrets well.

This was a book which had me changing my loyalties all the way through. Sometimes I felt sorry for Scarlett as it seemed she had been manipulated and strung along by this older man who should of course have had nothing to do with her. At other times, I felt that she was the one doing the manipulating and that she was a very scheming young lady knowing exactly what she was doing. Of course, at just 15, she was very much the innocent, thinking she knew what she wanted but really she was being abused.

Suspicion fell on a few characters throughout the book and by moving between the past and the present, the author cleverly leads her readers to have doubts about all the men it could be. Like Nina, I wasn't sure who I could or should trust and that included Scarlett. How much of her story was true and how much was her covering for herself and her lover?

The Affair was not at all predictable. I thought I had worked out who Scarlett was having a relationship with. I even made myself a wee note so I could be pleased when I was proved right. Of course, I was completely on the wrong track! Amanda Brooke has written her story so well really delving into the devastation caused to so many relationships and showing just what effect Scarlett's affair had on not just her own family but also the families of the suspects.

This is the first Amanda Brooke book I have read and I was very impressed with her ability to weave the different aspects of her plot together so well, keeping me turning the pages, keen to find out just what had been going on.

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