I really wanted to like this book! I found Frank's book Sullivan's Island years ago and really enjoyed it. Her books have steadily gone downhill since, but I grabbed Return to Sullivan's Island as soon as I saw it, hoping it would reverse the trend.
Unfortunately, it did not. Cecily was the only female character really worth getting to know, and she was a strong but secondary character. The protagonist, Beth, is a newly-minted college graduate who is pressured to put her life on hold for a year and return to the family's house on Sullivan's Island. She does so, but resentment rolls off of her in waves. She does finally come to terms with her decision, but then makes one foolish choice after another. Even worse, she knows they are bad choices, but plunges in headfirst anyways.
The plot was heavy-handed and the entire story lacked subtlety, probably because all of the characters were stereotypes: the dutiful daughter, the judgmental matriarch, the good ole boys, Mr. Wrong-but-oh-so-delicious, etc. Finally, the conflict was resolved much too easily.
If this book was a cheap paperback, it would be an okay beach read. Not worth the hardcover price, however.