wilma-bride
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- Joined
- Jul 13, 2005
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Book #10 of 50 - The Life I Left Behind by Colette McBeth
Six years ago, Melody Pieterson was attacked and left for dead. Only a chance encounter with a dog walker saved her life. Melody's neighbor and close friend David Alden was found guilty of the crime and imprisoned, and the attack and David's betrayal of her friendship left Melody a different person. She no longer trusts her own judgment, she no longer trusts her friends. In fact, she no longer really has any friends. She's built a life behind walls and gates and security codes; she's cloistered herself away from the world almost entirely.
And then, soon after David is released from prison, Eve Elliot is murdered in an attack almost identical to Melody's. With the start of a new police investigation, Melody is suddenly pulled from her ordered, secluded life and back into the messy world around her. But as she learns more about Eve's murder, Melody starts to wonder if perhaps David hadn't betrayed her after all...if perhaps the killer is someone else entirely, someone who's still out there, preparing to strike again.
Narrated alternately by Melody and by Eve's lingering ghost, The Life I Left Behind is a taut thriller and an intimate look at two young women bound together in ways neither of them could ever have predicted.
This was a great book; it was an easy read and the storyline was good. It had a good pace to it and kept me guessing right until the end.
Book #11 of 50 - No Longer Safe by A J Waines
She was your best friend. Now she’s your deadliest enemy – and there’s nowhere to run…
When Alice receives an invitation from Karen, her charismatic University friend, to stay in a remote cottage in Scotland, she can’t wait to rekindle their lost friendship. But two more former students arrive – never friends of Alice’s – and as the atmosphere chills, Karen isn’t the warm-hearted soulmate Alice remembers. Barely is the reunion underway before someone is dead and the fragile gathering is pushed to breaking point.
As the snow cuts them off from civilisation and accusations fly, Alice finds herself a pawn, sinking deeper into a deadly game she can’t escape.
I am really torn with this book. I enjoyed it all the way through...until the end. It was a fabulous read, with a good (if somewhat a little unbelieveable) storyline. But the end seemed to come completely out of nowhere and was so far fetched, it wasn't even funny. I almost threw my Kindle across the room in disgust. I haven't read a book whose ending disappointed me so much since Handle With Care (Jodi Picoult). Despite that, because I enjoyed the writing style and storyline so much, I am going to read more by the same author.
Six years ago, Melody Pieterson was attacked and left for dead. Only a chance encounter with a dog walker saved her life. Melody's neighbor and close friend David Alden was found guilty of the crime and imprisoned, and the attack and David's betrayal of her friendship left Melody a different person. She no longer trusts her own judgment, she no longer trusts her friends. In fact, she no longer really has any friends. She's built a life behind walls and gates and security codes; she's cloistered herself away from the world almost entirely.
And then, soon after David is released from prison, Eve Elliot is murdered in an attack almost identical to Melody's. With the start of a new police investigation, Melody is suddenly pulled from her ordered, secluded life and back into the messy world around her. But as she learns more about Eve's murder, Melody starts to wonder if perhaps David hadn't betrayed her after all...if perhaps the killer is someone else entirely, someone who's still out there, preparing to strike again.
Narrated alternately by Melody and by Eve's lingering ghost, The Life I Left Behind is a taut thriller and an intimate look at two young women bound together in ways neither of them could ever have predicted.
This was a great book; it was an easy read and the storyline was good. It had a good pace to it and kept me guessing right until the end.
Book #11 of 50 - No Longer Safe by A J Waines
She was your best friend. Now she’s your deadliest enemy – and there’s nowhere to run…
When Alice receives an invitation from Karen, her charismatic University friend, to stay in a remote cottage in Scotland, she can’t wait to rekindle their lost friendship. But two more former students arrive – never friends of Alice’s – and as the atmosphere chills, Karen isn’t the warm-hearted soulmate Alice remembers. Barely is the reunion underway before someone is dead and the fragile gathering is pushed to breaking point.
As the snow cuts them off from civilisation and accusations fly, Alice finds herself a pawn, sinking deeper into a deadly game she can’t escape.
I am really torn with this book. I enjoyed it all the way through...until the end. It was a fabulous read, with a good (if somewhat a little unbelieveable) storyline. But the end seemed to come completely out of nowhere and was so far fetched, it wasn't even funny. I almost threw my Kindle across the room in disgust. I haven't read a book whose ending disappointed me so much since Handle With Care (Jodi Picoult). Despite that, because I enjoyed the writing style and storyline so much, I am going to read more by the same author.
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