Review posted October 2, 2024
Flatiron Books, 2022. 384 pages.
Review written September 17, 2024, from a library book.
Starred Review
The prologue of this book shows Poppy, almost eighteen years old, putting a DNA test in the mail. Then Chapter One begins one month earlier and as the book unfolds, we find out why she'd want to find out about her own ancestry.
Because one month earlier, Poppy was called Katie. Her friends were urging her to complete her application for the science fair with the project they'd worked on together. But instead, after school, her family picked her up in a minivan and they destroyed her SIM card and drove away without saying goodbye.
They drive to California, as the title suggests. And things are different from all the other safe houses where they've lived during Poppy's life. Poppy realizes her mother has lived in this neighborhood before. Her father is uptight. And her little sister is pouting about not getting to have real friends.
Poppy doesn't know what her parents are running from, but she knows that they are hiding from someone. All her life, her priority has been her family, but will things change now that she's coming up on her eighteenth birthday?
Because they want Poppy to have a normal life, her parents sign her up for a summer class in advanced math, taught by a Stanford professor. She sits near a guy who's obviously a big deal, and later she sees him at the country club pool where she gets an under-the-table babysitting job. But doing well in the class puts some interest on her. Seeing more of this guy means she starts keeping secrets from her parents. And then she gets tired of all the secrets they're keeping from her. So she submits that DNA test. And she's not quite ready for what she finds out when she does.
This book had me reading avidly, wanting to find out what the big secret was, as well as what would happen next. I went out on my balcony to read it for a half-hour, and instead decided to spend my afternoon that way. A thoroughly enjoyable book!