
The Sandlers are newcomers to their summer home of The Hollow, a hamlet outside the little town of Smithfield, Massachusetts.When they return to their real lives in New York after the disappearance, Joshua throws himself into work while maintaining a grueling schedule of investigation in The Hollow: calling the police chief twice a day, spending his weekends interrogating neighbors.Nathalie's cello sits untouched as she plunges into depression.Their opposing responses to uncertainty and grief push them further and further apart.The struggle of parents following a child's death or disappearance is a story that's been told a thousand times, but Sigel's portrayal is fresh and realistic, and Nathalie and Josh are shown so clearly that their agony is almost unbearable.It is a credit to Sigel that I, too, held out hope for a happy ending to Dan's disappearance.
The small town is drawn beautifully.The police chief, Sammons, is not the usual bumbling hick portrayed in small-town law enforcement.He is thorough and determined, and most importantly, he cares deeply and never gives up on finding answers for the Sandlers.Information about the townspeople is dribbled out in a realistic, non-intrusive fashion.Coupled with Sigel's gift for description, this makes for a richly nuanced image of The Hollow and its inhabitants.
In The Disappearance, Efrem Sigel has crafted a haunting, beautiful novel of tragedy's aftermath, with deeply human characters and a satisfying resolution. <a href="http://hollybooknotes.blogspot.com">On My Bookshelf</a>
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