Cover Image: The Gone and the Forgotten

The Gone and the Forgotten

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

This book is unlike anything I've ever read. I normally don't love any books that are super emotional. This book was just amazing. I loved the remote aspect of it. As well as the drama. I would love to read more from this author in the future.

Was this review helpful?

This book is filled with every kind of family drama I could think of. Sixteen-year-old Prue is going to stay with her Aunt on a remote little island after her mother tried to kill herself. She decides that she will go and try and get her aunt to answer a question that she has been wondering about her entire life... that she was never allowed to bring up to her mother or grandmother... She wants to know who her father is and knows her aunt has to have at least some answers.

When she arrives on the island she doesn't expect the weirdness that starts right off the bat that had me thinking that this book was going to go in a whole different direction(which I think I would have enjoyed, and made a lot of things make more sense to me at least). However, after the initial weirdness, things seem to calm down a bit and we don't hear any more about it. But her aunt, the aunt's husband, and the husband's grandmother are acting weird and are hiding things...

The book is sort of a roller coaster of intenseness where you think we're finally going to be getting some answers, and sometimes we do, but mostly it dies off into nothing. Then Prue is off hanging with the island kids or taking driving lessons from her uncle...acting completely normal even though we can see it's NOT. Quite a few times her uncle acts particularly skeevy, and while it bothers her at the moment she tends to forget about it afterward and even defends him. Then it gets intense again and something is revealed. While a lot of this book is on the slower side, you can feel that it's building up to something big... Which we did get. Some of which was surprising, and other parts left me feeling vaguely unsatisfying, especially at the very end.

This is the first book I've read by this author, and I will check out her other books.

Was this review helpful?

The summer of 1993 is not going to be easily forgotten. 16-year-old Prue has grown up with her mother and her gran in London, but her childhood was not a conventional one. Her mother strived to keep her sheltered, not letting her play outside with the other kids, timing her walk home from school to ensuring she doesn’t participate in extra-curricular activities. Her life is surrounded by secrets with the main one being her father. Prue wants to know who her father is, and when her mother ends up in hospital after an attempted suicide following her gran's death, Prue’s aunt forces her to spend the summer at her home on the Island of Noost, one of the Shetland islands with the promise of telling her the truth. However, what Prue learns in the course of her summer is a lot more than what she had bargained for. Her family is riddled with secrets, including a possible murder.

Prue is a typical confused 16-year-old with a lot to learn. Some moments she acted mature and in others completely stupid. She doesn’t make the best of decisions a majority of the time, but then she is 16 and has a lot to learn. Unfortunately for her, some lessons may be hard to swallow and others should never have happened.

I really enjoyed this story. I wasn’t sure what to expect after reading #peopleofabandonedcharacter as the premise and timeframe are completely different. I went through a lot of mixed feelings over Prue as a lot of the time I wanted to slap her attention-seeking ways, but then pitied her for the lack of guidance she has had through life so far. She really just needed a hug and someone who she can trust to talk to. The twists and turns had me fearing for the worst. It was quite an uneasy read in parts and with a huge revelation which I didn’t see coming, plus with a few more which I feared and hoped were incorrect. Overall, this is another brilliant page-turning novel by @clarewhitfieldauthor and I am looking forward to whatever she writes next!

Was this review helpful?

This story, part coming of age and part gothic mystery, was really very good! After her grandmother’s death and her mother’s latest suicide attempt 16 year old Prue is summoned to spend the summer holidays in the Shetlands with her Aunt Ruth, Ruth’s husband - her Uncle Archie and Archie grandmother Veronique (call me Ronnie). The family pile is on the small remote island of Noost in the Shetlands. Prue can’t think of anything she would rather do less but Ruth tells her this will give them a chance to really talk and Prue takes this to mean she may finally find out who her father is as her mother has been tight lipped about that little nugget.

The house fits the description of gothic to a “T” - large and rambling, old, draughty and with numerous secret passages and priest holes. When she arrives though, Ruth is not keen on talking and Prue is frequently left to her own devices. In the village, such as it is, she learns that Archie was suspected of the murder, 20 years ago, of his then girlfriend Evie O’Hara. No evidence of this was ever found. Evie’s mother still stalks the Anderson lands in a deranged way. Prue moves herself into Archie’s former room. The elders are not happy about this but let it go telling her in no uncertain terms to not touch the books. Of course Prue touches the books. Inside she finds stashed money but also the occasional letter from Evie to Archie and these are enough to confirm in her mind that the two were very much in love and she doubts that Archie would have killed her.

Ruth and Archie are artists. She sneaks into Ruth’s studio and doesn’t know what to make of the rather disturbing artworks. Archie works out of the summer house and his artwork is rather more erotic. Meanwhile Prue is exploring her developing sexuality and is sneaking around more and more in the search for answers - about her father and about the death of her younger sister Holly, about her mother’s melancholia.

It all comes to a head one night when she has gotten too close to some uncomfortable truths and the resulting confrontation was a jaw dropper for sure. This story builds up a head of steam. The characters were fantastic, so devious, so many hidden secrets. This was a very well put together mystery with dark psychological undertones. There was always a sense of creeping menace which blossomed into fully fledged horror at the end of the book. I would never have picked that ending! Many thanks to Netgalley and Head of Zeus for the much appreciated arc which I reviewed voluntarily and honestly.

Was this review helpful?

This story follows 16-year-old Prue in 1993 following her grandma's death and her mother's suicide attempt. She spends her school holidays on a remote island with her Aunt Ruth, Uncle Archie (whom she hardly knows), and his mother, Ronnie. Prue decides to stay with them to find out who her father is from her aunt. While there, she discovers her uncle is suspected of murdering a local girl, Evie, twenty years earlier. She brings it upon herself to find out the truth of these situations. In doing so, she also finds out the truth about how her younger sister was killed.

I was intrigued to read this book based on the description and the fact that I loved Whitfield's previous book, People of Abandoned Character. However, I did not find myself enjoying this book until the last 25% of it, when the twists and turns and reveals happened (all of which I loved!!).

The beginning of the book was intriguing, but the middle was very slow and nothing seemed to really happen. Prue stays with her aunt solely to find out about who her father was, yet nothing is really mentioned until it is revealed who he is. Something is mentioned at the start about the case of her younger sister's murderer potentially being released, yet nothing is mentioned until then end, when it is revealed what actually happened. These things seemed like such important topics that would be explored throughout the entire book, but they only really popped up at the end. They were also dealt with a very rushed manner.

The murder of Evie was better dealt with, as it was mentioned throughout the whole book in different ways. However, again, the reveal at the end seemed quite rushed.

Was this review helpful?

A good thriller that felt slightly tedious at times but maybe that adds to the book? Thanks to Netgalley and the publishers for an advanced copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

This book takes you on quite a ride. It is a slow burn for a lot of it, very descriptive of a time and place. Part mystery, party coming of age as the main character tries to understand her family's history A father she has never known, a mother with severe depression, she goes off to stay with her aunt and more secrets are revealed there

Was this review helpful?

Suspenseful, thriller to keep you on the edge of your chair. Enjoyed this book and look forward to more from this author.

Was this review helpful?

Well family secrets never stay hidden and they always come to the surface in some shape or form, a good read and I read this book in one sitting ..

Was this review helpful?

Prue is 16 and her mother is in the hospital after a suicide attempt. She goes to live with her aunt on a remote island in Shetland, where she finds out that her uncle was suspected of murdering his girlfriend 20 years earlier. Along with learning more about that, she also hopes to find out answers to her paternity and other things kept quiet in her family. This was pretty good. I guessed at most of the secrets and what happened to the missing girlfriend pretty early on, but it didn't take away from the story since it was more about Prue than it was about a mystery. 4 stars.

Was this review helpful?

This book was intriguing and well=written, though I found some parts a bit slow. Overall a good read!

3.5 stars, rounded up.

Thank you to Head of Zeus, Apollo and NetGalley for the chance to read this book!

Was this review helpful?

Set in 1993, we join Pru as she is shipped off to an island in the Shetlands to stay with her Aunt now that her Nana has died and her mother is hospitalized due to an attempt to take her own life. Pru wants badly to stay in her home with her friends but her Aunt entices her to come with a promise to reveal all of the family secrets which include the identity of Pru's father.

Pru arrives on the island and meets a crazy cast of true characters. There is a vein of coming of age throughout the book as Pru chases her first kiss and more. These parts are so well written you will undoubtedly feel that you are in high school again and lng for those long Summer days.

There is quite a bit of mystery featured in the book, the unnamed father, the death of Pru's younger sister and a missing young woman from 20 years before. Pru's family is tied up with all of these secrets and as the Summer draws to an end, Pru discovers more than she bargained for. If you reminisce about your 16th summer, love a family drama or long for well written coming of age story, then #TheGoneAndTheForgotten is for you! #HeadofZues #NetGalley #NetGalleyReads

Was this review helpful?

I really enjoyed 'People of Abandoned Character' (it's an absolute belter, totally recommend) so I was excited for Whitfield's second novel. Sadly, it wasn't what I was hoping for! Maybe it's partially because the premise wasn't quite so audacious, but this never engaged me - and I'm sad to say I put it aside before finishing. I didn't think that the writing was all that strong and I gleaned very little sense of character or place. There was a lot of exposition to foreground the family drama and I found my interest waning in these sections. Otherwise, I don't have too much to say about this one - which I suppose says a lot, really!

Was this review helpful?

A brilliant book that is fast paced, suspenseful and gripping to read. I would definitely recommend this book to my audience, it is superb

Was this review helpful?

This book, "The Gone and the Forgotten" by Clare Whitfield is a very different book to "Persons of Abandoned Character". I really enjoyed reading about Prue's summer in Noost, a remote Shetland isle in 1993. The house she stays in is very quirky, and so are the characters who reside within. I really enjoyed Ronnie with her natural remedies, gins and teas. There was a more sinister side of the story, we find out who Prue's father is and also what happened to Evie.

Was this review helpful?

CW: rape, suicide, depression, drug abuse, alcohol abuse

This story follows 16-year-old Prue in 1993 following her grandma's death and her mother's suicide attempt. She spends her school holidays on a remote island with her Aunt Ruth, Uncle Archie (whom she hardly knows), and his mother, Ronnie. Prue decides to stay with them to find out who her father is from her aunt. While there, she discovers her uncle is suspected of murdering a local girl, Evie, twenty years earlier. She brings it upon herself to find out the truth of these situations. In doing so, she also finds out the truth about how her younger sister was killed.

I was intrigued to read this book based on the description and the fact that I loved Whitfield's previous book, People of Abandoned Character. However, I did not find myself enjoying this book until the last 25% of it, when the twists and turns and reveals happened (all of which I loved!!).

The beginning of the book was intriguing, but the middle was very slow and nothing seemed to really happen. Prue stays with her aunt solely to find out about who her father was, yet nothing is really mentioned until it is revealed who he is. Something is mentioned at the start about the case of her younger sister's murderer potentially being released, yet nothing is mentioned until then end, when it is revealed what actually happened. These things seemed like such important topics that would be explored throughout the entire book, but they only really popped up at the end. They were also dealt with a very rushed manner.

The murder of Evie was better dealt with, as it was mentioned throughout the whole book in different ways. However, again, the reveal at the end seemed quite rushed.

The characters are (I'm assuming) written to be unlikeable. I liked that, though it also became tiring because I just wanted a couple more characters to root for.

Overall, I didn't enjoy this book as much as I wanted to. I think it was a great effort on Whitfield's part, as I LOVED the reveals, but just didn't hit me like her previous book did.

I would like to thank Head of Zeus and Netgalley for providing me with an ARC in exchange for a voluntary and honest review.

Was this review helpful?

It's the story of a family's unravelling through the eyes of a confused and isolated 16-year-old girl trying to make sense of the past… This book was such a pleasure to read, such a beautifully written, atmospheric book , everything about this book is just so perfect and beautiful, the writing, the characters, the world building and the story.

Was this review helpful?

nteresting but not really my cup of tea. Well written I just personally couldn’t get into the story. Her mother died by suicide and so she goes to love with her aunt and uncle on a remote island. But their lives are not what she thought. And there are definitely some buried secrets. I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.

Was this review helpful?

I didn't enjoy any part of this book. The beginning was boring but I'd been hoping it would pick up. I kept giving it a chance. I hated the way Prue had not a single adult in her life willing to give her any guidance. She had a friend telling her to lose her virginity even if she didn't want to, a grandma trying to get her to drink every night, an aunt that was never around, and an uncle that obviously wanted to sleep with her. The mystery of Evie O'Hara was the only enjoyable part of the book. I dreaded reading it but kept pushing through, hoping the ending would be better. Finding out who killed Evie was the only satisfying part of the book.

Was this review helpful?

Really about a 3.7, but here we are. Equal parts clever, disturbing, and dragging, The Gone and the Forgotten is a book that was fine while reading, but will probably not haunt my thoughts for any substantial amount of time.

Was this review helpful?