(12/5/2023)
On the glorious beaches of Southern California and Hawaii, the surf is up in this 1960s-era tale about mothers and daughters.
You can practically hear The Beach Boys singing “California Girls” in this novel about surfer sisters Mindy and Ginger Donnelly and their mother, Carol, a world-class athlete and terrible mom. Fans of Taylor Jenkins Reid’s Malibu Rising (2021) will enjoy this story, which shares some of same locales, but the dysfunctional family at its center is one of a kind. Carol is a water creature who never got the knack of how to be a mother. Her first love is the ocean, and her daughters suffer because of it. They wear dirty clothes, Carol forgets to pick them up at school, and she regularly abandons them to hit the beach. When Mindy and Ginger are teens, they too become surfers, though Mindy is a natural and Ginger is struggling to keep up. Things go sideways when Mindy outshines Carol in the water, and that's just the beginning of the grown-up problems the sisters face. Benjamin nails the damage caused by traumatic childhoods marked by insecurity and fear of abandonment. Mindy becomes a shallow minor celebrity garnering small roles in beach movies, and Ginger comes under the spell of a narcissistic drug user. The three Donnellys go their separate ways until, years later, fate steps in. This sun-soaked novel is wonderfully awash in the music, television, and fashion of the '60s as well as the counterculture movement that touted drugs and dropping out. Benjamin based this novel, in part, on real-life female surfers who faced sexism in the mid-20th century.
A sun-drenched tale of two sisters trying to make peace with their past.