By Sara Steven
Twin sisters Jocelyn and Maddy Marx grew up in a tight-knit family on Cape Cod, but they couldn’t be more different. Jocelyn, laid-back and dreamy, still lives in their hometown as a Realtor. Maddy, intense and ambitious, left for New York after college and never looked back. Until the summer they turn thirty-one.
After a dramatic fall from grace in her career, a pregnant Maddy returns to the Cape with her husband and announces she’s back for good. For Jocelyn, it’s less a reconciliation than a reminder of a life that was ripped away from her and the deep grief she’s carried ever since. Back in each other’s orbit, the sisters reopen old wounds and are forced to confront what it will take to heal.
Salt Sisters is a moving exploration of sisterhood and motherhood, and the courage it takes to face the past, forgive, and finally let go. (Synopsis courtesy of Goodreads)
This is the third book I’ve read by this author, and it was just as engrossing as the first two! I felt that the grieving process was captured perfectly, and understandably, from the perspectives of twin sisters who view the same tragic events in vastly different ways. For Jocelyn, it hit the hardest, while Maddy is more of a bystander. It creates a large divide between the two women, further complicating a relationship that has always been difficult.
Giving outlooks from both women in the past, then returning the reader to the present time, really helped me to better understand where each one is coming from. Jocelyn views Maddy as selfish and uncaring, while Maddy sees Jocelyn as rigid and unforgiving. Really, neither can really grasp the full extent of what the other is going through, allowing for the opportunity to give both characters more grace within their experiences. There is some honesty to both suppositions; Jocelyn finds it hard to give anyone some slack, while Maddy seems to view the world from a more internal perspective. But with time and experience, maybe they can see things from the other’s viewpoint.
When a triggering event occurs between the two sisters, it sends ripples through families and their town. I don’t think Jocelyn nor Maddy could have imagined the fallout, and while I understood that it wasn’t meant to be so upending, I can’t blame either sister for their reaction. I questioned if they could come back from the fallout, and what would happen moving forward. If they could rebuild the trust. With so many years of discord already, it was hard to imagine there could be any coming back from the event.
I appreciated that both women change and grow through their experiences, the ones they face together, and the ones they have apart from one another. Having twins be the main character was really clever, too, because it’s assumed that twins have an internal connection to one another, but for Maddy and Jocelyn, it’s anything but. There were some moving, touching moments that brought me to tears, still others that made me angry, first siding with one twin, then the other, realizing no matter who you believe the most in, they both deserve a second chance at happiness. Salt Sisters was a definite five-star experience!
Thanks to Lindsey J. Palmer for the book in exchange for an honest review.
Enjoyed this post? Never miss out on future posts by following us.
Listen to this book on Speechify!
.jpg)



.jpg)




