Some villains are strangers. Others gave birth to you.
The most shocking, heartbreaking, and unforgettable relationship in *Shady* isn’t romantic—it’s between Giselle and her mother, Greta. And it’s this dynamic that gives the novel its emotional core.
Greta is everything a mother shouldn’t be: cruel, jealous, emotionally violent. She doesn’t nurture Giselle—she breaks her down. And yet, Giselle still seeks her approval, her love, her presence. Why? Because *Shady* reminds us that family trauma is the deepest kind of wound.
This is more than just a toxic relationship. It’s a generational curse—one that Giselle must fight to break. The emotional scars Greta leaves shape every decision Giselle makes—who she trusts, how she loves, and how she sees herself.
If you’re a reader drawn to mother-daughter complexities, generational trauma, and stories where forgiveness and freedom hang in the balance—*Shady* will leave you breathless.