CONCRETE ANGEL (2015) by Patricia Abbott
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
Eve (short for Evelyn) Moran
is a narcissist, a kleptomaniac, a hoarder, and a schemer. She is also
physically attractive and capable of turning on the charm when necessary, which
is how she (much of the time) gets away with her thefts. She is a murderess,
too—but lest you accuse me of spoiling a surprise, there isn’t one; you’ll find
this out on the first page. She manages to get away with that crime thanks to
her daughter
Christine, the novel’s narrator, who has been only too ready since early childhood to accept the blame for her mother’s wrongdoings.
Christine, the novel’s narrator, who has been only too ready since early childhood to accept the blame for her mother’s wrongdoings.
The product of parents who
were hidebound and judgmental instead of affectionate and attentive, Eve, who
seems to me possessed of an instinctive, unconscious guile, a kind of naïve
cunning—at least in her early days—is someone who received more criticism than
support or remediation during her formative years. This dysfunctionality, along
with her unappeasable acquisitiveness, has carried over into her marriage to
Hank Moran and the home she made for him and, eventually, for Christine.
While she has stood by her
mother through all of the latter’s tribulations, while she has endured the
physical and emotional absence of her father and the conflicting attitudes and
approaches of maternal and paternal grandparents, the college-aged Christine
must ultimately deal with a moral dilemma and come to grips with the fact that
Eve has put yet another and utterly helpless individual into a perilous
situation, and that she—Christine—is the only person with the power to resolve
it, for better or worse.
Thinking about the novel’s
title, I’ve wondered whether it applies to mother or daughter or both. Eve has
been an attractive woman her entire life, but a woman encased in the hard shell
of the kind of self-absorption that fuels manipulation when it serves her
purpose. Christine, on the other hand,
is inherently a well-intentioned—albeit frequently misled— girl who has had to harden
herself against the vagaries of her unconventional, erratic upbringing.
Readers familiar with
Patricia Abbott as a writer known primarily for her short crime fiction may
have to adjust their expectations, as I did, when they begin reading Concrete Angel, her debut novel, because although it contains
more than its share of criminal behavior, it really isn’t classifiable as a crime
novel by traditional standards. It is, rather, a well-written and fascinating
psychological portrait of a woman who cannot control the impulses that drive
her, and the consequences she and the impulses have on those closest to her,
especially her daughter.
Emphatically recommended.
© 2015 Barry Ergang
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Award-winner Barry Ergang’s work can be found at Smashwords
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1 comment:
I am so happy you liked CONCRETE ANGEL! And what a wonderfully complex reading both you and Kevingave it. When other writers review your work it is doubly satisfying. Many thanks!
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