Finding Mrs. Ford by Deborah Goodrich
Royce 404 pages
I have to admit, I
thought Finding Mrs. Ford was going
to be about Henry Ford’s wife. Don’t know where I got that; there is nothing on
the cover that even remotely suggests that. It doesn’t matter---once I started this
wonderful novel, I couldn’t put it down.
Mrs. Susan Ford, no
relation to Henry that is mentioned in the book, lives a privileged life. She
is wealthy, has a stepson whom she adores (and who adores her), a beautiful
home, money and staff to take care of her and her home. Living the good life takes little doing on her
part.
Thirty-five years have
passed since the events of 1979, and now that past has come to call. She must
pay for the life she led then. And for what she did. The FBI knocks on her door
and asks about a man named Sammy Fakhouri. An Iraqi with ties to ISIS, he is
arrested on his way to see Susan, although Susan was not expecting him.
Jump back to the summer
of ‘79. Susan was a college co-ed, a rather studious and quiet young woman. She
meets the out-going and sassy Annie. The two become best friends, although they
could not be more different. They had a summer job, but when an opportunity
arises to work as a waitress in a disco, both jump at the opportunity—Annie more
so than Susan.
The disco is a gross,
shady place where there is more going on than music, dancing, getting high and
drinking. It’s a place were extremely powerful men hangout. Susan gets romantically
involved with Sammy. But in 2014, Susan is wondering why he’s coming to see
her.
The novel is broken into
two parts: Part One focuses on Susan while Part Two focuses on Annie. There is
a major twist right at the point where Part One transitions to Part Two---a
stunner for sure. Not one that I saw coming.
“Finding Mrs. Ford” receives 5 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.
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