The Weird Sisters by Eleanor Brown
“The weird sisters” of the title are not necessarily all that peculiar, but as daughters of a professor of Shakespeare who names them after the bard’s most famous female characters, it is not surprising that the phrase clings to them.
Rosalind, Bianca, and Cordelia love each other, but claim not to like each other very much. After years of living apart, the bookish sisters (There is no problem a library card can’t solve) find themselves awkwardly reunited. The three descend on the family home packing serious secrets.
Returned to their childhood threesome, the sisters regress into familiar patterns of recrimination and resentment. But in the end, to paraphrase Irving Berlin, Lord help whoever comes between these sisters.
An enjoyable read, if a bit predictable.