Maeve lives by the rules. Therese quit following them somewhere in adolescence and never looked back. Mary Kay Andrews builds the whole novel on that gap, and she's smart enough not to smooth it over. These sisters irritate each other the way only siblings can, with the practiced precision of two people who know exactly which old wound to lean on. Then their mother dies, and the loss forces them back into the same room in Savannah, where the grief that follows isn't tidy or redemptive. It's just awkward. They circle each other like people who once shared a bathroom and now share nothing but a surname and a mysterious inherited painting that might be worth a fortune.
The road-trip structure earns its keep. Andrews doesn't use it to hop between pretty postcards; she uses it to do actual emotional work. Ireland supplies the color, all twisty lanes and damp villages and pubs where everyone has an opinion and a story to go with it. But the real journey is the slow thaw between two women who've spent years casting each other as the villain. The painting is the excuse. The reckoning is the point. Old assumptions keep getting knocked over: who was favored, who was failed, what their parents were actually like. The pleasure is watching both sisters realize they've been carrying a version of the family that never fully existed.
The prose is what Andrews readers come for. Breezy, funny, loose with banter, never showy. She trusts a scene to hold its feeling without underlining it, and the dialogue carries most of the weight; when Maeve and Therese go at each other, you can hear decades of grievance packed into a single barbed aside. The silver-tongued Irishmen they keep bumping into are a pleasant complication. They're sketched with a lighter hand than the sisters, closer to charm and wit than full interior life, and that's the right call. The book knows where its attention belongs. The sisters surprise you. The men mostly just delight you.
Pace-wise, this glides. It's comfort reading with a satisfying little mystery threaded underneath, so anyone hoping for the tension of a real art-world thriller should reset before they start. The painting's provenance unspools gently, in service of feeling rather than suspense. What you get instead is that book-club register where you laugh more than you planned to and then, somewhere around the family revelations, feel the floor tilt under a memory you thought you had straight.
Why you should read
- Fans of warm, funny book-club fiction with real feeling underneath
- Readers who love estranged-sibling stories and buried family secrets
- Anyone craving a summer novel set in atmospheric Ireland
- Mary Kay Andrews regulars who want banter and bittersweet grief
What to expect
- Breezy, dialogue-driven prose that's funny and easy to sink into
- A steady, comforting pace rather than a thriller's rush
- A road-trip structure that doubles as an emotional reckoning
- Charming love interests drawn with a lighter touch than the sisters
The payoff is quiet. It's the realization that forgiveness can look like two stubborn people agreeing to drive a little farther together. By the last chapter the painting barely matters. What matters is that Maeve and Therese are talking again and meaning it, and that shift, earned mile by reluctant mile, is the part that stays with you after the Irish scenery fades.