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Mercy Town

Nancy Chadwick’s Mercy Town is a tender and stirring story about grief, forgiveness, and the roots that keep us tethered to home, whether we like it or not. It follows Margaret “Ret” Payne, a reporter who returns to her rural hometown of Waunasha, Wisconsin, under the guise of a journalistic assignment. As she digs into the town’s latest development project, she’s forced to unearth the long-buried trauma of her younger brother’s accidental death and confront the emotional wreckage that followed. It’s a story that swings between past and present, personal memory and community reckoning, heartbreak and healing.

Reading Mercy Town hit me harder than I expected. Chadwick’s writing is patient. Her prose breathes, settling deep into the emotional grain of things without ever rushing. She’s especially good at capturing the feel of a small town. Its rhythms, its silences, its gossip, its grudges. The scenes between Margaret and her husband Jesse are warm and believable, full of the kind of understated affection that makes a relationship feel real. And Bean, Margaret’s younger brother, is rendered so vividly in memory that his absence aches. Chadwick doesn’t just tell us what loss looks like. She lets us sit with it, wander around inside it, and see how it shapes a life.

Some scenes leaned on introspection and repetition, and the back-and-forth between timelines occasionally blurred the story’s forward motion. Still, I appreciated that the book didn’t sugarcoat the complexity of grief. Margaret isn’t always likable, and she doesn’t have all the answers. But that’s what made her journey resonate. There’s something relatable in her hesitation, in the way she avoids her pain until it corners her. The way Chadwick threads this emotional unraveling through the lens of a journalist chasing a story made for a compelling structure.

I’d recommend Mercy Town to readers who enjoy quiet, character-driven novels with emotional depth. If you’ve ever carried the weight of unfinished grief or struggled to forgive someone (including yourself), this book will feel like a gentle, persistent tug at your heart. It’s not a fast read, but it’s a worthwhile one.

Pages: 248 | ASIN : B0DVD27S8R

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