
Katie and Chuck Knox have that special child, Devon, who has the ability and the will to go all the way. The will matters almost as much as the ability, and Devon is known as "Ice Eyes" to others in her gym group, all of whom know they'll never be as good as she is. When a young man named Ryan, who works in the gym, is killed in a hit-and-run accident, things start to fall apart, and Katie's only interest is in holding them together for her daughter (and for herself). She'll do anything to protect her family, she tells herself and others. We discover that she's not the only one. Even Drew, Devon's younger brother, is powerfully affected by the aspirations of his sister.
The suspense here derives more from the tension among the characters than from the mystery itself, and things do get very tense. It's powerful stuff, and you might never watch videos of Simone Biles with quite the same joy in performance again.
2 comments:
Looks like Megan has another winner on her hands. We once knew a couple like the parents in this book: they had a very promising basketball player son. Sacrifice and obsessiveness about his training schedule were ongoing to the exclusion of all else, including a social life or the needs of their other children. Then he had a career-ending (before he even had a career) injury. A decade later their main topic of conversation was what their son could have accomplished. They could never let it go.
It's my favorite. But so far each one is my favorite. I am Katie Knox, I fear.
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