The May house A novel

Jillian Cantor

Book - 2026

"No matter what's going on in the May sisters' lives, the one thing they can rely upon is seeing each other for one week each year, while staying at their grandmother's beachside home in gorgeous Coronado. As adults, Julia, Emily, and Nora aren't particularly close, spread out across the country and busy with careers, relationships, and the minutia of life, but their promise to Grandma Vera keeps them anchored together, if only for one week every May. One year Julia, the oldest and most dependable sister, doesn't show. And suddenly Nora and Emily start to question how much they truly know about their sister's life. Told in alternating points of view, spanning from their time together with Grandma Vera as k...ids into their adult lives, The May House explores how a decades-long family secret has unknowingly shaped each sister and, ultimately, how it brings them closer together. Funny, poignant, and brimming with heart, The May House is an irresistible story about the special bond between sisters and figuring out what matters most in life, in all its ups and downs"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Atria Books 2026.
Language
English
Main Author
Jillian Cantor (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781668091159
9781668091166
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Three sisters make a yearly pilgrimage to their grandmother's beach house, a place that holds their dearest memories and most painful revelations. In 1985, Grandma Vera makes the young May sisters promise to spend a week visiting her Victorian house overlooking the Pacific Ocean on Coronado Island every May for the rest of their lives. The children make a solemn oath over firepit s'mores and stick to it for the next 30 years. The three girls couldn't be more different, although they're recognizable types: Eldest Julia is Type A personified, middle girl Emily is the cynic with a secret, and baby Nora is the family diva. Each year, while their widowed father stays behind in Chicago, the girls grow from squabbling adolescents to moody teens to adults with nothing in common and little contact outside of their yearly summer idyll. This most interesting aspect of their sisterhood--their seemingly mutual lack of interest in each other--is unfortunately left unexplored in favor of more familiar conflicts. A constant in their Coronado visits is Nate, the surfer next door who at various times is Julia's boyfriend or Nora's crush. Early on, the novel skips ahead to 2019 as Nora and Emily arrive in Coronado to find that Julia is not just late but, for all anyone knows, has disappeared without a trace. The flashbacks of the girls growing up and both succeeding and failing at the game of life all go toward unraveling the mystery of Julia's disappearance, something to do with a box of letters found years ago in Grandma Vera's armoire. Although the novel travels on well-worn ground--a failing marriage, a struggling career, doubts about parenting--there's enough companionable drama to steer us toward the novel's startling end. The quintessential beach read--women talking, shocking secrets, and a really hot guy. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.