Maureen 's Reviews > The Child
The Child (Kate Waters, #2)
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This is a second novel by Fiona Barton, following her much-lauded The Widow. It also features the crime journalist Kate Waters, when she finds herself investigating a crime in which the police and her own crime editor are not greatly interested.
The skeleton of a very young baby (possibly new-born) has been discovered on a building site in Woolwich. Forensic examinations are not much use in the identification of very small babies. The story creates some interest locally, but the original houses on the site were demolished many years ago, and the only thing the forensics team can come up with (from the plastic bag the body was wrapped in), is that it was buried in the 1970s or later.
In parallel with Kate's investigation into who was living in the demolished houses in the 1970s and 80s; we are introduced to three women, two of whom want to hide the past, and one who desperately wants to find out the truth about her missing baby (who was stolen from the maternity hospital the day after her birth). But if the body is that of the stolen baby, she was buried at Woolwich years after she disappeared from the maternity hospital, and her mother, Angela, never lived there.
The other two women are a mother and daughter, Jude and Emma, who have been seriously estranged for most of their lives, but both lived for a time in the Woolwich terrace. Jude was a true hippy, and after she divorced Emma's father; had brief and stormy relationships with a number of men, then settled down with Will, an older man who was a popular university lecturer. This relationship ended when Emma suddenly changed from a happy, contented girl into the worst teenager imaginable with constant tantrums (except when she shut herself up in her room). The situation became so bad that Jude and Will threw her out of the house, although she was only 15. Emma never came back to live with her mother, who was deserted by Will soon after Emma's departure. With the help of an old school friend, Emma pulled herself together, got into university and ended up as a successful free-lance book editor, married a kind and caring man. She is now just about on speaking terms with Jude, and occasionally visits her.
Kate puts an ad in the paper to try and trace anybody who knows anything about the dead child and is contacted by Angela, who has become convinced that the child is her missing baby Alice, although the time-scale is all wrong. Kate manages to persuade the police to do a forensic test on both Angela and the dead baby to see what lies in the DNA and therefore if there is a match.
The ingenious plot of this engaging narrative picks up pace towards a truly thrilling climax. The cast of characters are real, believable people, flawed like all of us; with Kate being a particularly appealing character because she is compassionate as well as keenly ambitious.
The skeleton of a very young baby (possibly new-born) has been discovered on a building site in Woolwich. Forensic examinations are not much use in the identification of very small babies. The story creates some interest locally, but the original houses on the site were demolished many years ago, and the only thing the forensics team can come up with (from the plastic bag the body was wrapped in), is that it was buried in the 1970s or later.
In parallel with Kate's investigation into who was living in the demolished houses in the 1970s and 80s; we are introduced to three women, two of whom want to hide the past, and one who desperately wants to find out the truth about her missing baby (who was stolen from the maternity hospital the day after her birth). But if the body is that of the stolen baby, she was buried at Woolwich years after she disappeared from the maternity hospital, and her mother, Angela, never lived there.
The other two women are a mother and daughter, Jude and Emma, who have been seriously estranged for most of their lives, but both lived for a time in the Woolwich terrace. Jude was a true hippy, and after she divorced Emma's father; had brief and stormy relationships with a number of men, then settled down with Will, an older man who was a popular university lecturer. This relationship ended when Emma suddenly changed from a happy, contented girl into the worst teenager imaginable with constant tantrums (except when she shut herself up in her room). The situation became so bad that Jude and Will threw her out of the house, although she was only 15. Emma never came back to live with her mother, who was deserted by Will soon after Emma's departure. With the help of an old school friend, Emma pulled herself together, got into university and ended up as a successful free-lance book editor, married a kind and caring man. She is now just about on speaking terms with Jude, and occasionally visits her.
Kate puts an ad in the paper to try and trace anybody who knows anything about the dead child and is contacted by Angela, who has become convinced that the child is her missing baby Alice, although the time-scale is all wrong. Kate manages to persuade the police to do a forensic test on both Angela and the dead baby to see what lies in the DNA and therefore if there is a match.
The ingenious plot of this engaging narrative picks up pace towards a truly thrilling climax. The cast of characters are real, believable people, flawed like all of us; with Kate being a particularly appealing character because she is compassionate as well as keenly ambitious.
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Reading Progress
Finished Reading
March 7, 2020
– Shelved
Comments Showing 1-50 of 52 (52 new)
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Ceecee
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rated it 3 stars
Mar 07, 2020 10:16AM
Glad you enjoyed it Maureen- great review. 🤗❤️
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Helga wrote: "Great review Maureen! This one was one of my favorites. 💕"
Thank you Helga, glad you enjoyed it too 💖
Thank you Helga, glad you enjoyed it too 💖
Meredith wrote: "Wonderful review, Maureen! I am adding this one!"
Thanks Meredith, hope you enjoy it 🌺
Thanks Meredith, hope you enjoy it 🌺
Jenna wrote: "Terrific review, Maureen! It's always good when the characters are so believable and human."
Thank you Jenna, very true 🤗
Thank you Jenna, very true 🤗
Peter wrote: "Sounds fascinating, Maureen - brilliant review as always. :):)"
Thanks Peter, appreciate it 👍🏻
Thanks Peter, appreciate it 👍🏻
Lindsay - Traveling Sister wrote: "Fabulous review Maureen! I’m reading this now and loving it too!"
Aww thanks Lindsay, hope you continue to enjoy it 🌺
Aww thanks Lindsay, hope you continue to enjoy it 🌺
Wow, Maureen! I got chills as I was reading your review. Fantastic job on describing the story without giving it away
Fantastic review, Maureen. I love stories where the characters feel real and believable. That's a winner for sure. ❤
Constantine wrote: "Fantastic review, Maureen. I love stories where the characters feel real and believable. That's a winner for sure. ❤"
Thanks Constantine, yes me too! 👍🏻
Thanks Constantine, yes me too! 👍🏻