✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
HomeStore

At The Breakfast Table

Product image 1

At The Breakfast Table

At The Breakfast Table

This is a fiction novel told from four perspectives, a family drama and historical mystery about hidden histories and long-held secrets. Set on Prinkipo Island, Turkey, in 2017 during the 100th birthday of a celebrated artist, the story invites readers to confront what is kept private and what must eventually be spoken. Ideal for adult readers who enjoy multi-voice narratives, intimate family sagas, and literary mystery, with a contemplative, evocative, and quietly suspenseful tone.

The narrative moves through four intertwined viewpoints, revealing different angles of a life lived across a century. The central image—the artist painting her pain onto a dining room wall—transforms private memory into visible history, inviting you to piece together the truth alongside the characters. The writing blends lyrical description with precise, restrained storytelling to create an immersive, cinematic reading experience.

Readers follow a journey of memory, art, and reconciliation as past and present collide during a milestone celebration. The setting shifts between a sunlit home and the weight of inherited secrets, building tension while offering empathy for each voice. The experience rewards careful attention, quiet reflection, and curiosity about how families carry histories forward.

  • Four interwoven perspectives reveal a nuanced family history
  • The dining room wall as a dramatic storytelling device that exposes hidden pasts
  • Historical setting and generational dynamics drive tension, empathy, and reflection
  • Lyric, cinematic writing that invites imagination and inference without overexplanation
  • Rich character work and a suspenseful, character-driven journey

After finishing, readers gain insight into how memory shapes identity, how art can surface truth, and how compassionate storytelling can change how we see our own families. It leaves a lasting impression of curiosity, empathy, and a renewed interest in the histories that quietly influence the present.

$5.47
At The Breakfast Table
$5.47

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

This is a fiction novel told from four perspectives, a family drama and historical mystery about hidden histories and long-held secrets. Set on Prinkipo Island, Turkey, in 2017 during the 100th birthday of a celebrated artist, the story invites readers to confront what is kept private and what must eventually be spoken. Ideal for adult readers who enjoy multi-voice narratives, intimate family sagas, and literary mystery, with a contemplative, evocative, and quietly suspenseful tone.

The narrative moves through four intertwined viewpoints, revealing different angles of a life lived across a century. The central image—the artist painting her pain onto a dining room wall—transforms private memory into visible history, inviting you to piece together the truth alongside the characters. The writing blends lyrical description with precise, restrained storytelling to create an immersive, cinematic reading experience.

Readers follow a journey of memory, art, and reconciliation as past and present collide during a milestone celebration. The setting shifts between a sunlit home and the weight of inherited secrets, building tension while offering empathy for each voice. The experience rewards careful attention, quiet reflection, and curiosity about how families carry histories forward.

  • Four interwoven perspectives reveal a nuanced family history
  • The dining room wall as a dramatic storytelling device that exposes hidden pasts
  • Historical setting and generational dynamics drive tension, empathy, and reflection
  • Lyric, cinematic writing that invites imagination and inference without overexplanation
  • Rich character work and a suspenseful, character-driven journey

After finishing, readers gain insight into how memory shapes identity, how art can surface truth, and how compassionate storytelling can change how we see our own families. It leaves a lasting impression of curiosity, empathy, and a renewed interest in the histories that quietly influence the present.