This sounds like a setup for a suspense novel, and What Could Be Saved does offer suspenseful moments and surprising reversals. But two other elements make this novel uniquely satisfying: the portraits of each Preston family member, and the novel’s depiction of the unintended consequences of late 20th-century Americans abroad ... Genevieve is an especially memorable character, depicted at first as a shallow expat wife but when confronted with extreme loss is forced to change dramatically. Schwarz also gives wonderful texture to life in early 1970s Bangkok, although occasionally those details go too far, lending weight to moments that don’t need them ... juggles a complex story and structure, creating believable characters in its portrait of a family shattered by loss.
Schwarz reveals all in compelling, 'can’t put it down' prose while at the same time building masterfully developed characters who each had a part to play in past events.
... superb ... Schwarz is a remarkable storyteller, juggling many characters, and the seamless alternating chapters narrated by Laura and a servant from the Preston’s house in Bangkok gradually deepen the reader’s understanding of the past and present. Schwarz’s stellar work is riveting from its start all the way to the final horrifying twist.
Bouncing between modern-day D.C. and 1970s Bangkok, the novel is grounded in its deeply realized characters and the relationships among them, but the author layers in a consideration of power dynamics, racism, and privilege in a way that adds an undercurrent of realism and ugliness, particularly regarding the way the Prestons lived in the '70s. At the same time, the book is a gripping mystery that subtly ratchets up the tension with each chapter ... A richly imagined page-turner that delivers twists alongside thought-provoking commentary.