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Synopsis:

For the first eighteen years of her life, Rose Gold Watts believed she was seriously ill. She was allergic to everything, used a wheelchair, and practically lived at the hospital. Neighbors did all they could. They held fundraisers and offered shoulders to cry on. But no matter how many doctors consulted on her case, how many tests were run, or how many surgeries Rose Gold underwent, it seemed no one could figure out what was wrong with her.

It turned out that her loving mother, Patty Watts, was a really good liar.

Convicted of aggravated child abuse, Patty served five years in prison. But when she is released, she has nowhere to go. She begs Rose Gold, who did not visit Patty for the first four years she was incarcerated, to take her in. And when Rose Gold says yes, the entire community is stunned.

Patty insists that she wants the two of them to reconcile their differences. She claims she has forgiven Rose Gold for turning her in to authorities and testifying against her.

But Rose Gold knows her mother. Patty Watts always settles the score.

Unfortunately for Patty, Rose Gold is no longer her weak little darling . . . and she’s waited such a long time for her mother to come home.

Mothers never forget. Daughters never forgive.

Review:

Author Stephanie Wrobel
Debut novelist Stephanie Wrobel says the idea for Darling Rose Gold came to her when she first learned about Munchausen syndrome by proxy from a school psychologist who had experience with the syndrome. Wrobel began researching and became “fascinated.” She learned that perpetrators are usually mothers. “The mother-child relationship is supposed to be sacred, but here it isn’t. The perpetrators’ motivation also surprised me — they act out of a need for attention or love from authority figures within the medical community.” Moreover, many health care professionals consider the syndrome incurable because the perpetrator typically denies any wrongdoing. Wrobel’s discoveries made her “want to walk around inside one of these mothers’ minds.”

In Darling Rose Gold Wrobel takes readers inside Patty’s mind via her first-person narration that begins on the day she is released from prison after serving five years for abusing Rose Gold. The alternating narrative from Rose Gold commences earlier in November 2012, shortly after Patty has begun serving her sentence. While Patty’s storyline proceeds in real time, Rose Gold’s moves forward incrementally until the two finally merge in the present.

Nobody wants to hear the truth from a liar. ~~ Patty watts

Living on her own for the first time at the age of eighteen, Rose Gold, at the outset, resides in a rundown apartment and works as a cashier at Gadget World. Initially taken in by Patty’s best friend, Mary Stone, Rose is now learning to navigate the world independently. Unable to tolerate food for most of her life, she learns what foods she likes and how to prepare them. Her only friend, Alex (Mary’s daughter), has moved away, but they remain in touch. Rose has a boyfriend who lives in Colorado. She met Phil online and they have never met, but text regularly and she looks forward to seeing him in person so that she can experience her first kiss. Before that happens, however, she wants to undergo dental treatment for which she is saving her money. Her misshapen, discolored teeth are a result of years of stomach acid eating away the enamel surfaces. So she is extremely self-conscious, holding her hand in front of her face. And Rose is, of course, infamous in the little town of Deadwick where she has lived her entire life. She tells herself that she is “not disgusting,” but she doesn’t believe it. It was, in fact, Phil who helped Rose Gold figure out what her mother was doing to her. “It’s odd that hospital food never makes you sick. Only your mom’s food,” Phil told her. Still, it took Rose Gold another six months to piece it all together and finally seek help.

By the time Patty is released, much has happened to Rose Gold. Her friendship with Alex has changed dramatically, she has purchased and moved into her mother’s childhood home, and arrives at the prison with her two month old son, Adam.

The two women take up residence in the family home and begin a tense game of cat and mouse. Wrobel reveals Patty’s plan to regain Rose Gold’s trust and hear Rose Gold ask forgiveness for having testified at Patty’s trial. After all, it was Rose Gold’s testimony that secured her conviction. Little by little, Patty seeks more time alone with Adam . . . and to exert control over Rose Gold’s life as she did for so many years. She is distrustful of Rose Gold, mystified by her daughter’s locked bedroom door and convinced that Rose Gold is suffering from an eating disorder since she consumes barely any food. She congratulates herself, “All these years I’ve been telling people she was sick. Look who was right after all.” No matter what Rose Gold is up to, Patty remains convinced that she will always be the clever one and her daughter will never outsmart her.

The two women’s inner dialogues are diabolically entertaining and full of surprising twists. Wrobel slowly reveals the depth of harm that a lifetime of mistreatment has caused Rose Gold through her naive, but calculating interactions with others. Rose simultaneously engenders sympathy and anger, ultimately describing how she arrived at the realization that she was utterly alone in the world and finally decided to visit her mother in prison for the first time.

Wrobel keeps the two story lines advancing at a steady pace until they converge and the action accelerates. Shocking revelations about the women’s goals and motivations lead to a jaw-dropping conclusion.

Darling Rose Gold sets itself apart from other fictional stories about Munchausen syndrome by proxy. In those stories, the mystery is usually about what is actually happening to the child or which parent is the perpetrator. But Wrobel set out to write a story that is “more about the why. Not only does the reader know what Patty has done, but they’re also forced to live inside her head and watch her rationalize these actions.”

And that is precisely why Darling Rose Gold is such an impressive debut. It succeeds as an in-depth, disturbing character study about a tragically dysfunctional mother-daughter relationship. Each woman wants to be loved and accepted by the other. Both want to be celebrated for their individuality and, in Patty’s case, she wants to be appreciated for the great sacrifices she contends she made for her daughter. Yes, she maintains her innocence — even to herself — even though she fails to deceive anyone, including the townspeople who refuse to welcome her back and her former best friend, Mary, who is convinced from the moment she arrives back in Deadwick that no good will come from her return.

Darling Rose Gold demonstrates that Wrobel is a gifted and promising writer with the ability to develop multi-layered, complex characters while examining controversial topics that do not lend themselves to definitive conclusions. In Darling Rose Gold she has done so with sensitivity and compassion, while sustaining reader interest with unexpected, expertly-timed plot twists. Psychological thriller fans will find it impossible to put down . . . and contemplate it long after reading the last page.

Excerpt from Darling Rose Gold

1

Patty

Day of release

My daughter didn’t have to testify against me. She chose to.

It’s Rose Gold’s fault I went to prison, but she’s not the only one to blame. If we’re pointing fingers, mine are aimed at the prosecutor and his overactive imagination, the gullible jury, and the bloodthirsty reporters. They all clamored for justice.

What they wanted was a story.

(Get out your popcorn and Buncha Crunch, because boy, did they write one.)

Once upon a time, they said, a wicked mother gave birth to a daughter. The daughter appeared to be very sick and had all sorts of things wrong with her. She had a feeding tube, her hair fell out in clumps, and she was so weak, she needed a wheelchair to get around. For eighteen years, no doctor could figure out what was wrong with her.

Then along came two police officers to save the daughter. Lo and behold, the girl was perfectly healthy-the evil mother was the sick one. The prosecutor told everyone the mother had been poisoning her daughter for years. It was the mother’s fault the girl couldn’t stop vomiting, that she suffered from malnutrition. Aggravated child abuse, he called it. The mother had to be punished.

After she was arrested, the press swooped in like vultures, eager to capitalize on a family being ripped apart. Their headlines screamed for the blood of “Poisonous Patty,” a fiftysomething master of manipulation. All the mother’s friends fell for the lies. High horses were marched all over the land; every lawyer, cop, and neighbor was sure they were the girl’s savior. They put the mother in prison and threw away the key. Justice was served, and most of them lived happily ever after. The end.

But where were the lawyers while the mother was scrubbing the girl’s vomit out of the carpet for the thousandth time? Where were the cops while the mother pored over medical textbooks every night? Where were the neighbors when the little girl cried out for her mother before sunrise?

Riddle me this: if I spent almost two decades abusing my daughter, why did she offer to pick me up today?

Connolly approaches my cell at noon sharp, as promised. ÒYou ready, Watts?Ó

I scramble off my Pop-Tart of a bed and pull my scratchy khaki uniform taut. “Yes, sir.”

I have become a woman who chirps.

The potbellied warden pulls out a large ring of keys and whistles as he slides open my door. I am Connolly’s favorite inmate.

I pause at my cellie’s bed, not wanting to make a scene. But Alicia is already sitting against the wall, hugging her knees. She raises her eyes to mine and bursts into tears, looking much younger than twenty.

“Shh, shh.” I bend down and wrap the girl in my arms. I try to sneak a peek at her bandaged wrists, but she catches me. “Keep applying the ointment and changing those dressings. No infections,” I say, wiggling my eyebrows at her.

Alicia smiles, tears staining her face. She hiccups. “Yes, Nurse Watts.”

I try not to preen. I was a certified nursing assistant for twelve years.

“Good girl. D’az is going to walk the track with you today. Thirty minutes. Doctor’s orders.” I smile back, petting Alicia’s hair. Her hiccups have stopped.

“You’ll write me?”

I nod. “And you can call me whenever.” Squeezing her hand, I stand again and head toward Connolly, who has been waiting patiently. I pause at the threshold and look back at Alicia, making a mental note to send her a letter when I get home. “One hour at a time.”

Alicia waves shyly. “Good luck out there.”

Connolly and I walk toward I&R. My fellow inmates call out their farewells.

“Keep in touch, you hear?”

“We’ll miss you, Mama.”

“Stay outta trouble, Skeeto.” (Short for “Mosquito,” a nickname given as an insult but taken as a compliment. Mosquitoes never give up.)

I give them my best Queen Elizabeth wave but refrain from blowing kisses. Best to take this seriously. Connolly and I keep walking.

In the hallway Stevens nearly plows me over. She bears an uncanny resemblance to a bulldog-squat and stout, flapping jowls, known to drool on occasion. She grunts at me. “Good riddance.”

Stevens was in charge until I got here. Never a proponent of the flies-and-honey approach, she is vinegar through and through. But brute force and scare tactics only get you so far, and they get you nowhere with a woman of my size. Usurping her was easy. I don’t blame her for hating me.

I wave my fingers at her coquettishly. “Have a glorious life, Stevens.”

“Don’t poison any more little girls,” she growls.

Strangling her isn’t an option, so I kill her with kindness instead. I smile, the epitome of serenity, and follow Connolly.

The intake & release center is unremarkable: a long hallway with concrete floors, too-white walls, and holding rooms with thick glass windows. At the end of the hallway is a small office area with desks, computers, and scanners. It could be an accounting firm, if all the accountants wore badges and guns.

At the reception desk, the clerk’s chair is turned toward the radio. A news program plays. After a short break, the reporter says, we have the story of a baby boy gone missing in Indiana. That’s next on WXAM. I haven’t watched, listened to, or read the news since my trial. The press destroyed my good name. Because of them, my daughter didn’t speak to me for four years.

I glare at the radio. The chair swivels toward me, and I realize I know the clerk sitting in it. I privately refer to the bald and brawny man as Mr. Clean. I met him five years ago. He flirted with me all day, asking what perfume I was wearing while I batted him away. I’d feigned breeziness, but internally I was seesawing between fury at the injustice of my verdict and fear of the next five years. I hadn’t seen him again until now.

“Patty Watts?” he says, turning off the radio.

I nod.

“I remember you.” He smiles.

Mr. Clean pulls a form from his desk drawer, then disappears into the storage room. After a few minutes, he comes back with a small cardboard box. He hands me a piece of paper. “I need you to look through the inventory list and sign at the bottom to confirm you’re leaving with everything you brought here.”

I open the box and glance through it before scribbling my signature.

“You can change back into your street clothes now,” Mr. Clean says, gesturing to the bathroom and winking at me when Connolly isn’t looking. I tip my head and shuffle away, clutching the cardboard box.

In a stall, I rip off the jacket with DEPT. OF CORRECTIONS emblazoned across its back and dig into the box. After five years of prison food, my favorite pair of jeans, with the forgiving elastic in the waistband, is a little loose. I put on my Garfield T-shirt and a red sweatshirt embroidered with the initials of my community college, GCC. My old socks are stiff with sweat, but they’re still better than the rough wool pairs I’ve been wearing. I pull on my white gym shoes and notice a final item at the bottom of the box. I pick up the heart-shaped locket and think about putting it in my pocket, but instead clasp it around my neck. Better for her to see me wearing her childhood gift.

I leave the bathroom and hand the empty box back to Mr. Clean.

“You take care of yourself.” He winks again.

Connolly and I walk down the fluorescent-lit hallway of the admissions building toward the parking lot. “Someone coming to pick you up, Watts?”

“Yes, sir. My ride should be here soon.” I’m careful not to say who my ride is; though Rose Gold is twenty-three now, some people still imagine her as a sickly little girl. Some people would not be overjoyed to see us reunited. They don’t care that I stayed up all night monitoring her vitals during every hospital stay. They don’t know the depths of this mother’s love.

We stop at the door. My fingertips tingle as they reach for the push bar.

Connolly scratches his Ditka-esque mustache. “That pierogi recipe was a real hit with my in-laws.”

I clap my hands. “I told you it would be.”

Connolly hesitates. “Martha was impressed. She didn’t sleep on the couch last night.”

“Baby steps, sir. She’s coming around. Keep reading that book.” I’ve been coaching the warden on The Five Love Languages for the past few months.

Connolly smiles and looks lost for a second.

“Now, don’t get all emotional,” I joke, slapping his shoulder.

He nods. “Good luck out there, Patty. Let’s not meet again, okay?”

“That’s the plan,” I say. I watch him stride away, his clown-sized shoes smacking against the linoleum. He hefts his bulk into an office and closes the door behind him, and then there’s nothing left to face but a spooky silence. Just like that, the Illinois Department of Corrections is finished with me.

I try to ignore the wild thumping in my chest. Pushing the door open, I walk outside into blinding sunlight, half expecting an alarm to sound or a red light to flash. But it really is that easy: enter a building, leave a building, no one minds. I can go to a movie or church or the circus. I could get stuck in a thunderstorm without an umbrella or mugged at gunpoint. I am free, and anything can happen to me. I stretch out my fingers and marvel at the breeze on this crisp November day. Shielding my eyes, I scan the parking lot for the old Chevy van. But it’s a sea of sedans. No people.

She should be here any minute now.

I sit on the flimsy bench, scowling as the plastic protests under my weight. After several minutes of struggling to get comfortable, I stand. Back to pacing.

In the distance, my maroon van turns onto the long single-lane road that leads to the admissions building. As it creeps closer, I do my best to flatten any frizzies and straighten my sweatshirt. I clear my throat like I’m about to speak, but all I do is stare. By the time the van reaches the parking lot, I can make out my little girl’s narrow shoulders and blond-brown hair.

I watch Rose Gold back into a parking spot. She turns off the engine and leans against the headrest. I picture her closing her eyes for a minute. The ends of her chest-length hair rise and fall with every unsuspecting breath. Rose Gold has wanted long hair since she was a little girl, and now she has it.

I read somewhere the average person has a hundred thousand hairs on their head-more for blonds, fewer for redheads. I wonder how many strands it takes to fill a fist. I imagine pulling my daughter in for a warm embrace, twirling her locks through my fingers. I always told her she was better off with her head shaved. You’re much less vulnerable that way-nothing to grab hold of.

Daughters never listen to their mothers.

When she lifts her head, her eyes meet mine. She raises her arm and waves like the homecoming queen on a parade float. My own arm glides into the air and mirrors her excitement. I spot the outlines of a car seat in the van’s second row. My grandson must be buckled in back there.

I take a step off the curb toward my family. It’s been almost twenty-five years since my last baby. In seconds his tiny fingers will be wrapped around mine.

2

Rose Gold

Five years earlier

November 2012

Sometimes I still couldn’t believe I was allowed to read whatever I wanted. I rubbed the glossy magazine photos. A flawless couple held hands on a beach. A teenage boy with shaggy hair ducked into a waiting car. A radiant mother cradled her daughter as she walked the streets of New York. All of these people were famous. I knew the mother was a musician named BeyoncŽ, but I didn’t recognize the others. I was sure most eighteen-year-olds would.

“Rose Gold?”

I started. My manager, Scott, stood in front of me. “We’re about to open,” he said. “Can you put the magazine away?”

I nodded. Scott kept walking. Should I have apologized? Was he mad at me or just doing his job? Could I get written up for this? I was supposed to respect authority. I was also supposed to outsmart them. Mom always had.

I gazed at the copy of Chit Chat in my hands. I had been searching the tabloid for mentions of her. During her trial, they had written three stories about us. Now, on her first day in prison, they had nothing to say. Neither did the national newspapers. Mom’s imprisonment was nothing but a splashy feature in our local paper, the Deadwick Daily.

I put the magazine back on the endcap. Scott began clapping while he walked the store floor, yelling, “A smile is part of your uniform, people.” I glanced at Arnie on register two. He rolled his eyes. Had I annoyed him? What if he never talked to me again? What if he told all our coworkers I was a weirdo? I looked away.

The security guard unlocked Gadget World’s doors. No one was waiting outside. Sunday mornings were quiet. I flipped on my register’s light. The big yellow “5” didn’t illuminate. Mom always said a lightbulb out meant something bad was coming.

The tremblies in my stomach tightened. For the past year, I had dreaded any big day of her trial: opening arguments, my testimony, the verdict, sentencing. But the reporters didn’t care that “Poisonous Patty” was behind bars. No one but me had remembered it was her first day in prison. She’d still be free if I hadn’t gotten on that witness stand. I hadn’t talked to her since the arrest.

I tried to picture my mother-five feet five inches and stocky-in an orange jumpsuit. What if the guards hurt her? What if she made the wrong inmate mad? What if she got sick from the food? I knew I was supposed to be happy about these possibilities. I knew I was supposed to hate Mom, because people were always asking me if I did.

I didn’t want to imagine her in the present, covered with plum-colored bruises and growing pale from the lack of sun. I wanted to remember the mother I’d grown up with, the woman with broad shoulders and thick arms that could knead bread dough in minutes. Her hair was short and almost black, thanks to a cheap box dye. She had pudgy cheeks, a snub nose, and a big smile that lit up her face. I loved Mom’s smile because I liked looking at her teeth: white and straight and neat, a mouth as organized as her file cabinets. But it was her pale blue-green eyes that won you over. They listened, they sympathized. They were kind and trustworthy without her saying a word. When her fleshy hand enveloped yours and she trained those aquamarine eyes on you, you were sure you’d never feel alone.

Excerpted from Darling Rose Gold by Stephanie Wrobel. Copyright © 2020 by Stephanie Wrobel. Excerpted by permission of Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received one electronic copy of Darling Rose Gold free of charge from the author via Net Galley. I was not required to write a positive review in exchange for receipt of the book; rather, the opinions expressed in this review are my own. This disclosure complies with 16 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 255, Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.

8 Comments

  1. I read Saving Meghan which was captivating. This novel would be intriguing and gripping as it is a unique topic. Thanks.

  2. Saving Megan was a fantastic book about the same topic.

  3. Alicia Haney

    This book sounds intriguing and like a very good page turner! Thank you for sharing your book review. I would love to read it. I will be adding it to my TBR list.

  4. Angela Sanford

    I have heard of this disorder but never read any books about it. I have been hearing alot of great things about this book and would love to read and review it myself. Thank you so much for the chance!

  5. I have seen lots of documentaries but have yet to read a book on the subject. The psychology of these people fascinates me. Thanks for the chance.

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