Showing posts with label Advanced Reader's Copy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advanced Reader's Copy. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 March 2018

LOOK FOR ME BY LISA GARDNER

Rating: 4.5 stars

Synopsis:
The home of a family of five is now a crime scene: four of them savagely murdered, one—a sixteen-year-old girl—missing. Was she lucky to have escaped? Or is her absence evidence of something sinister? Detective D. D. Warren is on the case—but so is survivor-turned-avenger Flora Dane. Seeking different types of justice, they must make sense of the clues left behind by a young woman who, whether as victim or suspect, is silently pleading, Look for me.

My Review:
The past two years I have had the privilege of being opened to the world of psychological thriller fiction with the beautifully terrifying writing of Lisa Gardner and her books Right Behind You and Find Her.

Detective D.D. Warren has teamed up with badass survivor Flora Dane for a riveting new investigation into the life of a missing teenage girl. Like in any book written by one of your favourite authors, there is always something about their writing that just hooks you in immediately. I started reading Gardner’s D.D. Warren series on her seventh book into the series, yet it read like a standalone. I was baffled, I felt this guilty urge to go and read all of her other books before reading Find Her, but I didn’t need to. Every book she writes, whether it’s the Detective D.D. Warren series or her Quincy & Rainie series, she always writes in a way where they can be read as standalone adventures. Yes, there are many references to past stories, but it doesn’t leave you confused or feel like you are missing a part of the story.

Gardner certainly knows how to tell a story well and something often seen in her books is multiple perspectives, whether it be from different characters or different moments in time such as past tense reflections. However, in Look For Me, readers are enlightened into the mind of young Roxy Baez through her series of class essays entitled “What is the Perfect Family?”. In these essays, Roxy illustrates for the reader what it was like from the inside of her family, how she became a mother to her siblings and their experiences in a foster home system.

Look For Me is a story of mistakes, revenge, forgiveness and the true meaning of what it is to be a family. There are two really strong themes that Gardner focuses on in Look For Me, survival in a world of social media and how far one may go to stop the toxic cycle that continues to haunt many characters. Survival becomes a large part of Roxy’s part in the novel, whether it be in the foster home, out on the streets or in her family house with an alcoholic mother. In the years following Flora Dane’s escape from Jacob Ness, she becomes a vigilante as such where she starts up a support group for other survivors of kidnappings, predatory attacks or mass shootings. Roxy joins this group through a mutual friend’s recommendation and she learns what to pack if running away, what defence tactics work best and how to escape unscathed.

This new addition to Gardner’s D.D. Warren series isn’t as gruesome or cutthroat as her other books like Find Her but it still can be quite overwhelming as there is a lot going on in D.D. and Flora’s lives outside of the investigation. It certainly brings a large element of reality to the plate with the police procedures, the failure of the foster system and the irreplaceable damage that abuse can do to a family.

Lisa Gardner is a truly fantastic crime author and I highly recommend her books to anyone wanting to dive into crime fiction. If you enjoy books where you feel like you are constantly on the edge of your seat, her book Right Behind You is the book for you! However, if you are more of the grisly, gripping and gruesome, Find Her is one that will have you clawing for air as you turn the final pages.


Think Lovely Thoughts xo

Sunday, 5 March 2017

COVER REVEAL: THE COLOR PROJECT BY SIERRA ABRAMS

In the past couple of months, I became friends with a lovely young lady called Sierra Abrams who has certainly become one of my best friends. As it turns out, I became friends with her at the right time because she was working on her soon-to-be-released debut novel, THE COLOR PROJECT. Sierra was generous enough to send me an ebook ARC of her beautiful masterpiece! I am truly honoured to be on this journey with her and to join her today in celebrating the revealing of the cover for THE COLOR PROJECT!

 LOOK AT IT! It’s so so beautiful and aesthetically pleasing!


Thank you to Sierra for having me on this incredible journey with her! I’m so excited for the release of her fabulous book that I know you will all love just as much as I do!


RELEASE DATE: 18.07.2017

Goodreads Book Description:
Bernice Aurora Wescott has one thing she doesn't want anyone to know: her name. That is, until Bee meets Levi, the local golden boy who runs a charity organization called The Color Project.

Levi is not at all shy about attempting to guess Bee’s real name; his persistence is one of the many reasons why Bee falls for him. But while Levi is everything she never knew she needed, giving up her name would feel like a stamp on forever. And that terrifies her.

When unexpected news of an illness in the family drains Bee's summer of everything bright, she is pushed to the breaking point. Losing herself in The Color Project—a world of weddings, funerals, cancer patients, and hopeful families that the charity funds—is no longer enough. Bee must hold up the weight of her family, but to do that, she needs Levi. She’ll have to give up her name and let him in completely or lose the best thing that’s ever happened to her.


For fans of Stephanie Perkins and Morgan Matson, THE COLOR PROJECT is a story about the three great loves of life—family, friendship, and romance—and the bonds that withstand tragedy.


Excerpt:
The open moon roof displays a wide variety of starts. Out here on the highway, there are no streetlights or neighborhoods – it’s just a straight shot around the mountain, on the side of the cliff over the reservoir, and then through the hills – so it’s very dark and quiet. I look up with Levi, our heads semi-close, and smile.
He asks, “Do you know the stars?”
“Not really.”
“Me, neither.”
“It’s a shame,” I sigh
“I can be rather stupid.”
Embarrassed, I hurry to say, “That’s not what I meant.”
He laughs, and I laugh, and find that it is incredibly difficult to keep my eyes on the stars when Levi’s sitting next to me.
“I meant,” I add, “that I wish one of us did.”
“Yeah.”
I adjust in my seat, to make the conversation easier.
“Stars are almost…like…moments. To me.” As soon as these words come out of my mouth, I start to feel stupid. Do I sound stupid? I don’t know where this is coming from; I’ve never consciously thought about it before. It’s always been a thought in the back of my mind, like I like chocolate ice cream, and I would marry Matt Smith if he asked me, and My mother wants me to go to college.
Somehow, The stars are like moments to me fits on this list. “It’s like…they’re twinkling and staring us right in the face, but we have to brave enough to grab hold of them. You know?”
Levi looks at me, then sits back in his seat, still looking, still studying. Like he’s pondering. Somehow, this puts my nerves to rest.
“You’re right,” he says, finally. “You’re absolutely right.”


Follow Sierra:


Think Lovely Thoughts xo

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