March 7, 2020
Darling Rose
Gold by Stephanie Wrobel
For 18
years, Rose Gold Watts believed that she was seriously ill, until an internet
search made her suspicious that her that her mother was poisoning and starving her to gain
attention. She testified against her
mother in court, and “Poisonous Patty” Watts went to prison for five
years. Patty is about to be released and with nowhere to go, asks Rose Gold if she can stay with her. Rose Gold reluctantly agrees, since she now has a child of her own and fears what Patty might do to him. Patty always gets revenge on those who
wronged her, but Rose Gold is no longer a helpless child and has her own brand
of revenge in mind. As the saying goes,
revenge is a dish best served cold.
What a great piece of psychological fiction! The story alternates between Patty and Rose Gold in the present, and Rose Gold in the past. Both Patty
and Rose Gold have had years to think about revenge, and the pacing of the
story really ratchets up the tension as the reader watches Patty and Rose Gold
circle around each other like a pair of jungle cats. They have a lot more in common than they
think: neither one is likable; both are
highly manipulative; both women are unreliable narrators telling their own
version of the truth. Fascinating yet
disturbing and twisted, this is definitely like a train wreck: you just can’t look away. Once you start this book, it’s really hard to
put it down.
Loved the cover art! The plot for
Darling Rose Gold sounds a lot like the story of Dee Dee Blanchard and
her daughter Gypsy Rose. Hulu recently
did an original series called The Act which was based on Dee Dee and
Gypsy Rose.
I have a compressed vertebrae in my back so I have been having a lot of doctors’ appointments and tests over the last ten days. Somewhere along the way, I lost my print ARC of Darling Rose Gold. This irritated me almost as much as all the poking and prodding. Fortunately, NetGalley was gracious enough to provide me with an e-ARC so that I could finish the book and write a review.
Many thanks
to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an e-ARC in return for a review.
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