cover image The Safekeep

The Safekeep

Yael van der Wouden. Avid Reader, $28 (272p) ISBN 978-1-66803-434-7

Van der Wouden sets her accomplished debut in the Netherlands in 1961, where WWII-era secrets about a family’s country home come to light. Isabel, who’s nearly 30 and has never been kissed, has lived alone in the house since her mother’s death years earlier. She’s close with her gay younger brother, Hendrik, but officious with their older sibling, Louis, who inherited the property. When the family moved there in 1944, the house was fully furnished, down to the dinnerware, cooking pots, and sheets. Isabel, fastidious and compulsive, fiercely protects each item, and is distressed when she unearths a shard from a missing plate in the vegetable garden. Then Louis shows up with his girlfriend, Eva, and announces she’ll be staying at the house with Isabel while Louis travels. Eva’s efforts to engage Isabel are met with rudeness and distance; Isabel resents both Eva’s friendliness with the maid and her careless messes. When more items start disappearing—a teaspoon, a letter opener, a thimble—Isabel is perplexed and suspicious, and the story takes an unexpected and dramatic turn that leads to stunning realizations about the women’s entwined history. Van der Wouden’s sensuous writing and flair for drama make this a winner. Agent: Anna Stein, CAA. (May)