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A review by bookstasamm
Big Lies in a Small Town by Diane Chamberlain
5.0
I’m so happy that I received an ARC of Big Lies in a Small Town by Diane Chamberlain. I haven’t read a book by this author yet, but this won’t be my last.
North Carolina, 2018: Morgan Christopher is in prison for a crime she didn’t commit. She gets bailed out by the daughter of a local artist, Jesse Jameson Williams, who before his death helped troubled artists get their lives on track and art careers started. There are conditions to her parole, the main one being that she needs to restore a mural painted in 1940, which will be hung in Jesse Williams’ art museum in Edenton, North Carolina – a small town with a history. This museum is opening in two months, and Morgan knows nothing about art restoration, but desperate to leave prison, she agrees.
North Carolina, 1940: Anna Dale, a young artist from New Jersey has just won a national contest to paint a post office mural in Edenton, North Carolina. Her mother has recently passed away, and since she is basically alone she moves to Edenton while working on the mural. Not knowing much about Edenton, Anna starts to get to know the locals to see how they would like their town represented in the mural. She enlists the help of two young students, one white and one black, which leads to many prejudices in this small town being revealed.
I loved how this story was told from both Anna’s and Morgan’s perspectives, and the fact that I loved both stories was great. Normally, when books are told like this, I prefer one story to the other, but not in this case. The two women’s stories blend perfectly together in the way the story is told, and I was enthralled right from the beginning. I loved Anna’s story of painting the mural while she learns to survive in the South in 1940, and I loved Morgan’s story of restoring the mural while she learns to live with a past she isn’t proud of.
I was invested from page one of this book and loved seeing how it would progress. Chamberlain did a great job of drawing the reader in and wrote a beautiful story where I felt transported to Edenton. I look forward to reading more of her books. The way she brought everything together at the end was great. My only complaint, if you can call it that, was the epilogue which left me wanting more closure. I highly recommend this book!
Thank you NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for an advanced copy in exchange for my honest review.
North Carolina, 2018: Morgan Christopher is in prison for a crime she didn’t commit. She gets bailed out by the daughter of a local artist, Jesse Jameson Williams, who before his death helped troubled artists get their lives on track and art careers started. There are conditions to her parole, the main one being that she needs to restore a mural painted in 1940, which will be hung in Jesse Williams’ art museum in Edenton, North Carolina – a small town with a history. This museum is opening in two months, and Morgan knows nothing about art restoration, but desperate to leave prison, she agrees.
North Carolina, 1940: Anna Dale, a young artist from New Jersey has just won a national contest to paint a post office mural in Edenton, North Carolina. Her mother has recently passed away, and since she is basically alone she moves to Edenton while working on the mural. Not knowing much about Edenton, Anna starts to get to know the locals to see how they would like their town represented in the mural. She enlists the help of two young students, one white and one black, which leads to many prejudices in this small town being revealed.
I loved how this story was told from both Anna’s and Morgan’s perspectives, and the fact that I loved both stories was great. Normally, when books are told like this, I prefer one story to the other, but not in this case. The two women’s stories blend perfectly together in the way the story is told, and I was enthralled right from the beginning. I loved Anna’s story of painting the mural while she learns to survive in the South in 1940, and I loved Morgan’s story of restoring the mural while she learns to live with a past she isn’t proud of.
I was invested from page one of this book and loved seeing how it would progress. Chamberlain did a great job of drawing the reader in and wrote a beautiful story where I felt transported to Edenton. I look forward to reading more of her books. The way she brought everything together at the end was great. My only complaint, if you can call it that, was the epilogue which left me wanting more closure. I highly recommend this book!
Thank you NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for an advanced copy in exchange for my honest review.