cover image GRACE & FAVOR

GRACE & FAVOR

Caroline Upcher, . . Kensington, $14 (358pp) ISBN 978-1-57566-904-5

Two sisters on opposite continents, separated by childhood tragedy, learn to reconcile their different lives in a likable novel that belongs in a beach bag. Upcher, a British-born writer who sets many of her books in the Hamptons, narrates from the perspectives of both sisters, raised apart after their mother's suicide. Forty years later—older sister Grace having been adopted by a neighbor couple in Wales and infant Pat sent to her father in London—Pat, now a mousy London housewife with two vociferous teenagers, decides to rent a vacation house in Wales with her husband Gus, who needs a rest from his locksmithing business. Serendipitously, Pat discovers their rental is her parents' old home. Living in the house in Wales sparks Pat's fascination with her long-lost sister, who turns out to be a successful romance novelist with a glitzy, globe-trotting lifestyle that barely masks her bitterness and anger at her father's long-ago abandonment. When Pat joins her husband on a business trip to New York, she and her rebellious teenage daughter, Mary, drop in on Grace's East Hampton home, a visit made all the more chaotic and awkward by Grace's complicated affair with a married man, Pat's burgeoning marital worries, and Mary's sudden announcement that she is pregnant. Despite the firestorm, Grace and Pat—or "Favor," as Grace believes their mother meant to call her younger sister—make a grudging connection that helps both women to untangle their past and their parents' complicated history. The resulting novel, though a little too dark for pure escapism, will appeal to Upcher fans and readers looking for something to tote along on the Hamptons Jitney. (July)