Whidbey by T Kira Madden
Published by Mariner Books
Publication date: March 10, 2026
Genres: Fiction, Contemporary
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I’ve always been open to challenging reading, but admit that I may have found the book that pushed too far. Whidbey by T Kira Madden is told from the perspectives of three women, all of whom have had their lives irreversibly changed by a pedophile. Two are victims and one is the man’s mother. Although they’ve never met they’re all caught in the same insidious net caused by one man’s sick actions and their aftermath.
Each of these women has a story to tell. Birdie’s includes her abuse by the pedophile, the resulting trial, and the fact that she was 9-years-old at the time being used to discredit her. She has never recovered her life’s trajectory, battling ongoing mental health and addiction problems. Viv is older and was also involved with Calvin, the pedophile, when she was a teen, but her story is one of psychological exploitation on a much larger scale. Only now has she achieved fame with a book she wrote about Calvin. Bev is his mother and her love for him has narrowed the circle of her life to wherever he is or can be. She never questions his innocence.
When Whidbey opens Birdie is preparing to leave NYC for someplace quieter and far away because Viv’s memoir has renewed the focus on her case. Viv is being energized by the success of her memoir and is sure this will segue into a career as a TV celebrity. For Bev the renewed focus on Calvin makes the endless grind of her life working in a gas station diner even worse.
Madden’s writing style convincingly captures the voices of these desperate, broken women. It’s gritty, choppy, and at times deliberately inarticulate, reflecting the damage they’ve endured. I respect Madden’s writing and the lived experience that informs it, but I wasn’t in the right place for such unrelenting darkness. It’s not dark because of gore or graphic violence; it’s something that feels even heavier. There is so little hope for any of these women; making Whidbey relentless misery from beginning to end. I kept waiting for some glimmer of redemption or meaning beyond the suffering, but it never came.
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*I received a free copy of this book from Mariner Books in exchange for an honest review.*














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