07 March, 2012 | By: Rhee

Review: Wonder

Wonder






Title: Wonder
Author: R.J. Palacio
Pages: 320
Published: 2012

Summary: I won't describe what I look like. Whatever you're thinking, it's probably worse.

August (Auggie) Pullman was born with a facial deformity that prevented him from going to a mainstream school—until now. He's about to start 5th grade at Beecher Prep, and if you've ever been the new kid then you know how hard that can be. The thing is Auggie's just an ordinary kid, with an extraordinary face. But can he convince his new classmates that he's just like them, despite appearances?

Review: Where do I even begin with a book that has quite possibly managed to change all of my feelings towards books just by reading it? When I requested Wonder from NetGalley, I thought that I was going to read it and end up enjoying it since the few people I know have given it good reviews. I never, ever expected that I was going to fall in love with this book the way that I did. Not only did Wonder give me the chance to reflect on the way that I think about certain aspects of life, but it also made me laugh and cry from happiness and sadness and all the -nesses in between.

Ten-year-old August has been through more in his life than half a dozen people and he’s still going strong. Suffering from a chromosome deficiency, he was born with severe facial disfiguration that twenty-seven surgeries hasn’t managed to fix. His parents finally decide that August should go to school, and enroll him in a private school where the principal has three other kids who’ve volunteered to help him adjust and watch out for him.

This book is definitely listed as one of my favourite reads of 2012. Probably the absolute favourite, right up there with The Fault in Our Stars by John Green. I stayed up until 6am to try and finish Wonder, and was so disappointed that sleep needed to take priority to reading. Reading about Auggie’s life through his point of view as well as others’ (his sister, Via, his best friend, Summer, his other best friend, Jack, Via’s beau, Justin, and Via’s best friend, Miranda) gave me the chance to fall in love with, not only the plot, but each and every character just because I got a chance to see how they interacted in the life of Auggie and his family.

My favourite person (but least favourite point of view, unfortunately) was Via’s boyfriend’s, Justin. While I really disliked the way that Justin’s part was written in the same aspect of David Levithan’s Will Grayson (worse, actually, because I wasn’t sure where the characters were speaking at some points) I really enjoyed the way that he had with words, and the feelings that he had for Oliva were the most beautiful in the world. I found myself wanting to cry a little bit when I reached the end of his part, when he said:

"olivia reminds me of a bird sometimes, how her feathers get all ruffled when she's mad. and when she's fragile like this, she's a little lost bird looking for its nest. so i give her my wings to hide under."

I know the focus of the story really isn’t about Via, but I really, really liked the way that her character was written. She was so understanding and protective of her brother, where most teenagers would have been somewhat selfish in that aspect. She never asked for anything, never tried to have her wants and needs taken care of first. She put everything aside for Auggie, and I found that to be the best part of the novel. Even though the focus of Wonder was on August, I found myself loving Via most when it came to the characterisations.

Speaking of August, that boy… He’s amazing. I can’t even begin to imagine going through twenty-seven surgeries and then being brave enough to go to school and try and be normal. Being two years younger than everyone else was enough for me to hate school, so I can’t even imagine what it must have been like for him. August is such a strong, wonderful boy, and while they mistreated him so much in the beginning of the novel, he grew, as did those who hurt him and those who helped him. I loved seeing the transformation when these kids realised that it wasn’t about how their friend looked; it was about who he was as a person.

Wonder is a book that will probably always live with me, and I can’t imagine a day where I’ll find myself completely forgetting that I’ve ever read it. It’s one of those books that touches your soul and makes you realise that there’s more to humanity than what’s on the surface. If you have this on your to-read list, or even if you don’t, stop what you’re doing and go pick it up, because I guarantee that by the time you’re done reading it, you’ll realise just how wonderful Wonder actually is.

Rating: ★★★★★ 5/5 Stars
           I'd give it a million stars and it still wouldn't be enough.

Minor Updates

Please note, due to the fact that we were managing to confuse a few people, we have changed our email address from alifepixelated@live.co.uk to alifepixelated@live.com. To those of you who don't care, you may move along and ignore this update, but to those of you who do, the more you know...

Thank you and have a wonderful Wednesday!

Rhee & Kaitlyn
06 March, 2012 | By: Rhee

Waiting on Wednesday (1)

Waiting on Wednesday is hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine. It allows us to share what we're looking forward to read in the upcoming months or even years.

We're really excited to start Waiting on Wednesday and share what we're looking forward to reading with all of you!

Rhee's Pick:
Dark Companion
Dark Companion by Maria Acosta
Publication Date: July 3rd, 2012

When foster teen Jane Williams is invited to attend elite Birch Grove Academy for Girls and escape her violent urban neighborhood, she thinks the offer is too good to be true. She's even offered her own living quarters, the groundskeeper's cottage in the center of the birch grove.


Something's not quite right about the school -- or is it Jane? She thinks she sees things in the birch grove at night. She's also beginning to suspect that the elegant headmistress and her sons are hiding secrets. Lucky is the gorgeous, golden son who is especially attentive to Jane, and Jack is the sardonic puzzling brother.


The school with its talented teachers and bright students is a dream for a science and math geek like Jane. She also loves her new friends, including hilarious poetry-spouting rich girl, Mary Violet. But the longer Jane stays at Birch Grove, the more questions she has about the disappearance of another scholarship girl and a missing faculty member.


Jane discovers one secret about Birch Grove, which only leads to more mysteries. What is she willing to sacrifice in order to stay at this school...and be bound to Birch Grove forever?


How awesome does this book sound? I just can't wait to get my hands on it! Is it July yet?

Kaitlyn's Pick:
Shadow's Claim (Realm of Blood and Mist, #1)Shadow's Claim by Kresley Cole
Publication Date: August 21st, 2012


#1 New York Times bestseller Kresley Cole introduces The Dacians: Realm of Blood and Mist, a brand new paranormal romance collection following the royal bloodline of Dacia, a mysterious vampire kingdom within The Lore (Cole’s world of mythological creatures in her award-winning Immortals After Dark series)


Series opener Shadow’s Claim features Prince Trehan Daciano, a ruthless master assassin who will use every lethal skill he possesses to defend his imperiled kingdom—as well as his newfound princess. When an ancient secret threatens to destroy them all, can Dacia’s notorious prince of shadows keep his Bride alive against all odds?


 
  I think this new book by an author I haven't expierenced before, Kresley Cole, sounds interesting. I like that the plot seems (from what I can deduce from the synopsis) that the MC already has his love interest, and he's a wildly protective king. Definitely gonna pick this one up and give it a shot when it comes out in August!



So what are you waiting for this Wednesday? Leave us a link so we can check it out too!
05 March, 2012 | By: Rhee

Review: Unearthly

Unearthly (Unearthly, #1)





Title: Unearthly
Author: Cynthia Hand
Series: Unearthly
Pages: 435
Published: 2011

Summary: In the beginning, there's a boy standing in the trees . . . .

Clara Gardner has recently learned that she's part angel. Having angel blood run through her veins not only makes her smarter, stronger, and faster than humans (a word, she realizes, that no longer applies to her), but it means she has a purpose, something she was put on this earth to do. Figuring out what that is, though, isn't easy.

Her visions of a raging forest fire and an alluring stranger lead her to a new school in a new town. When she meets Christian, who turns out to be the boy of her dreams (literally), everything seems to fall into place—and out of place at the same time. Because there's another guy, Tucker, who appeals to Clara's less angelic side.

As Clara tries to find her way in a world she no longer understands, she encounters unseen dangers and choices she never thought she'd have to make—between honesty and deceit, love and duty, good and evil. When the fire from her vision finally ignites, will Clara be ready to face her destiny?

Review: I really shouldn’t be playing favourites with what book I pick to review first, especially when there are still so many others that I need to get done and have been waiting for a lot longer than Unearthly has, but I may or may not have fallen for this book enough to know that if I don’t get the review down today, it’s going to be potentially swamped with Hallowed spoilers when I read it this week.

Initially, I had no desire to read Unearthly. I had read reviews from people who I’ve friended and thought that while it sounded like an adequate book, it wasn’t something that was going to be nearing the top of my to-be-read pile. Then, when I won a copy of its sequel, Hallowed, I knew that I had to read it or else I’d never touch Hallowed and the point of entering the giveaway would not exist.

Clara Gardner, who is a quarter angel, starts having these visions of her purpose. Her destiny leads her to move with her family to middle-of-nowhere Wyoming so that she can fulfill her purpose, which every angel must do. Along the way, she finds challenges that she has to overcome, such as befriending the boy who she will have to end up saving, Christian, and batting away some unwanted enemies while finding some surprising new friends.

I have to say, when I started reading Unearthly, I thought it was going to be just an alright book. True, there were some good parts and other bad ones, but overall, I felt like it was just an average book. Clara seemed like a well-written character, which I enjoyed, and I really enjoyed the way she and her mom interacted, as well as her brother, Jeremy. The fact that there was the angel part in there really didn’t seem to matter much during the first part of the book. There were moments when I sort of forgot that I was reading a book about angels until she mentioned that she had to continue hunting down her purpose and then it’d all rush back to me. I’m not saying that it’s a bad thing. I’m just saying that there really wasn’t anything too special about the first half of the book.

It really was only when we got the point that we find out about Angela that I found myself really starting to like the book. The fact that Clara could relate to Angela was really awesome, and the fact that she was no longer alone and had someone to discuss all of her teen drama with was pretty exciting.

The only thing that I found a little bit frustrating was that there seemed to much stuffed into the book. I understand that certain things need to happen in the span of a book to set up a plot and break down all the boring and exciting details that are required to know in order to understand a character, but I honestly felt like there was too much time elapsing in the book. I found myself wondering when it would end multiple times, only to realize that I still had a percentage to go.

The angel storyline I wasn’t hugely keen on, but the ending is what really won me over in this book. In the span of the final twenty percent of the book, Cynthia Hand managed to take my reality of Unearthly and turn it upside-down, making me fall in love with everything about this novel. Kaitlyn and I were talking as I finished reading the book, and she was listening to me as I screamed from excitement and confusion and all the other reasons a person would scream as they finished up Unearthly. Despite its beginnings, the novel clearly ended up becoming one of my favourite reads this year.

If you’re looking for a good angel book and you’re late to the party (like me) check out Unearthly because it’s an amazing read in the end, even if the middle lags a little bit.

Rating: ★★★★★ 4.5/5 Stars
04 March, 2012 | By: Rhee

Review Copy Cleanup (Challenge #1): Show Me Your Pile



For more information about Review Copy Cleanup, click the banner in the right hand column and then participate with us so that you can review books in the future without all the stress of a huge pile of books waiting for you!


Here's my pile. Kaitlyn has none because she's less of a review requester and more of a 'whatever's on my bookshelf' person. I'll figure out a way to change that soon!

These are all in no particular order and are most likely showing up alphabetically because I'm scrolling through my Kindle to figure out what I need to read. That's how bad it is.

Neglected Past Review Requests:

Angel Evolution (The Evolution Trilogy, #1)   Five (Elemental Enmity, #1)   The New Death and others   Survival,  YA Paranormal Romance (Book 1 of The Guardians of Vesturon) 

From Publishers/Book Tours:

Hunted   Skater Boy   Whispering Hills

NetGalley:

Better   Lies Beneath (Lies Beneath #1)   Unshakeable Faith   Pure (Pure, #1)   Solitary    Slipping Reality   Wanderlove 

To be quite honest, I thought there were more books that I had to read and review, but apparently not! Yay!

What are your lists like?


03 March, 2012 | By: Rhee

In My Mailbox (2)

First off, I want to say to all of you beautiful, amazing, wonderful people out there, thank you so very much for helping our blog hit 1000 page views! That was a goal I was hoping for the end of the weekend, and the fact that we got there a day early is uber exciting! And to celebrate, I thought I'd make our In My Mailbox this week a video so you can see all the pretty things that showed up in my mailbox this week!

In My Mailbox is hosted by Kristi at The Story Siren. If you don't already participate in IMM, you definitely should, because it's a lot of fun!



Breakdown for This Week

Review:

The Peculiars  Grave Mercy (His Fair Assassin, #1)  Angel Eyes (Angel Eyes Trilogy, #1)  Spirit's Princess (Spirit's Princess, #1)

Bought:
Cinder by Marissa Meyer (If you missed it last week)
Rippler by Cidney Swanson (Not mentioned in video)

Won:
The Fault in Our Stars (Signed Copy) by John Green (courtesy of Heather @ The Flyleaf Review)
Hallowed by Cynthia Hand (courtesy of Lisa @ Lisa's Gadgets 'n Book World)
Partials by Dan Wells (courtesy of Debbie @ I Heart YA Books)

What did you guys get in your Mailbox this week?
Leave us a link and we'll check it out!

Guest Post & Kaitlyn's Reivew: Freestyle Love by Marcus Lopes

Title: Freestyle Love
Author: Marcus Lopes
Summary: When it comes to one-night stands, Malachi Bishop has “rules”. No pillow talk. No sleeping over. No planning a future hook-up. First names only. It’s just sex, not a prelude to love. But when Cole Malcolm, a smooth-talking management consultant, woos Malachi into bed, the rulebook is tossed out the window. 

The one-time fling leaves Cole reeling: Malachi is his first real shot at happiness, his “forever” man, and he’s determined to show Malachi just how good they could be together. But Malachi doesn’t believe in happily-ever-after, and dodges Cole’s play for his heart. After all, Malachi is still mourning the loss of Taylor Blanchard, whom he hoped to love forever. Then there’s Zach Brennan, a handsome twenty-five-year-old and student at the college where Malachi teaches. Falling for Zach could destroy everything he’s worked for, but Malachi can’t help himself. 

Caught by love and in its betrayal, it’s a later affair with a beautiful stranger that changes Malachi’s life most dramatically. Now Malachi must confront his present and his past that bring into question the larger fantasies of home and his place in the world.

Guest Post, written by the author himself! Yay!: Keeping On

This afternoon the sunlight glistens on the snow that fell two days ago. The brown-green grass has finally been covered up. Although it feels colder than -8°C, it actually feels like winter, and it’s a great day to hit the ski slopes. Seated at my kitchen table, the warm sun beaming into the room gives a much-needed lift to the day as well as my spirits.

Over the course of the past few days, I’ve had to trick myself into writing. I don’t have any trouble completing my Morning Pages. I’ve been writing Morning Pages for over ten years so that comes naturally to me. It’s the “real” writing that I’ve been struggling with lately — doing the necessary work on a short story or the novel I’m working on. I tell myself that if I write 1,000 words on the novel, I can watch that episode of “Criminal Minds” that I just downloaded. If I rewrite the opening of the short story that’s been sitting on my desk for the last three days, I can take myself to Le Tassé (the neighbourhood coffee house) for my afternoon Americano. I feel like a little kid whose parents are trying to get him to behave by bribing him. It seems silly that I have to coax myself into writing sometimes, but as silly as it does seem, it works — especially on a day like today when I feel restless.

Maybe restless isn’t the write word. I’ve been anxious. As an artist, I have opened my art, and by extension myself, up to criticism. Just like I had to learn not to take rejection personally when I first started writing, now, as a first-time author, I’m learning how to cope with criticism. My good friend, Adrienne, recently reminded me that I need to “just stay grounded in your conviction that you're doing what you want to do and feel called to do and you don't need the approval of strangers.”

That’s what I’m trying to do, stay grounded in my art. After all, I held stubbornly to a dream and the dream came true. That took courage and faith. Sometimes I forget that. And what was it that Polonius said? Ah, yes, it was this: “Give every man thy ear, but few thy voice; take each man’s censure, but reserve thy judgment. […] This above all: to thine own self be true, and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man.”

I am being true to myself. Each day I do something to edge myself, and my art, forward. I have great friends who encourage me, and my art. I have to hold onto faith. That is why, just for today, I will keep on keeping on.


Before I post my review, I would like to give a big thanks to all those that made this blog tour possible, and of course, Marcus Lopes, the author who took the time to write this book. 

Review: Let me begin this review by saying it is not easy for me to write this. Especially when I picked this book out for a blog tour, something special that people will definitely see and someone will read. I even got a guest post from the author, which makes this harder, but I can’t lie. I can’t. There will be spoilers in this review, so if you think about giving this book a chance, read on with caution.
            I have to be straight forward: I was unable to finish the book. I got past the half-way point, but more on that later.
            I started this book and though it opened with sex, I thought maybe it was just due to the nature of the two meeting. Oh, no, I was wrong. All these characters think about sex—if they’re not thinking about how terrible their lives were or some philosophical ‘this world is hell’ shit. Seriously.
            I’m going to talk about problems with the plot (the very little that there was) before I talk about stylistic problems. Malachi is a very jaded man. He is a jaded man and is, in a sense, a ‘Gary-Stu.’ Every single male mentioned in the first half of this book, with the exception of 2 (who knows—even they might) have a thing for Malachi on some level—even though he was a jerk! Seriously! None of the characters could say one thing to Malachi without him either locking them out, walking away, or giving them a look of contempt and giving them a “Is this even real?” I also thought it would be more than just… his relationships. There isn’t a plot other than Malachi’s and the character’s love life and how they struggle through that. I should have suspected that from the summary, so that’s not really an issue, but I figured it was implied there would be more to the book than the summary implied.
            Malachi. Oh, Malachi. I dislike him as a main character very much. He is so goddamn whiny. In the beginning, he feels this need for Cole, yet when he’s given the second chance to reconnect Cole, he rejects him! I don’t care how jaded you are, Malachi. A man of your age, and not a teenager, should be able to ration that no matter what you have feelings and you shouldn’t constantly bitch about those feelings and then, when you get a chance, you deny yourself? Malachi really is just like a teenager. I feel like most of the men treated love like they were a bunch of teenagers. And I’m a teenager saying that! Maybe I’d have liked this book if I was a horny gay man in my early 30s. I also feel like Malachi’s goddamn storminess was so, so beat to death that any moments he had where I liked him in the book, they were so out of character and awkward it just felt forced.
            Actually, I don’t even know if they are on the level of “teenager-dom”. Because I tell you, these men got laid a lot in these books, and yet, all they talk about is sex! All they think about is sex! One of the many times Cole is rambling about how he wants to be with Malachi, it’s a sweet paragraph. Up until the bit he includes something like “curl up with him in bed, naked.” Really? Did it have to be naked? Does a good relationship equal one with jack-rabbit amount of sex? It shouldn’t.
            I’m sorry this review is jumpy, but I just…there’s so much to say. And I don’t know how to say it all. But here’s another point: I wish that with this book, the author had taken time to set up Zach and Malachi's relationship, rather than just shove it all into a few paragraphs. As a reader, I can hardly sympathize with Malachi-I can only take the author's word for it that he loved Zach. We never saw their love bloom. To me, as a reader, it seemed like any other lust-spurred love. The author told us it wasn't, but because he told and did not show, it is difficult to keep that in mind as Malachi mourns throughout the book. Which he never stops doing. Which isn’t healthy. And as someone who thinks more than he lives, he should probably realize that’s not healthy and go and get himself help.
            Now, I said I didn’t finish it, but I got past the half-way point. And I did. But the line that put the nail in the coffin for me was an exact moment in the book. It was just after the reader learns that Malachi leaves Cole, but after his chapter with Chad (once again, a relationship that the author TELLS the reader about, not SHOWS the reader). It’s in Cole’s perspective, and Cole is thinking about all the problems he’s having with Malachi and their relationship. And the line is: “That was the most painful of all to Cole, to think that Malachi no longer desired him.” Now, I believe that at this point there has been a 4 year fast forward since Malachi and Cole initially get into a relationship. You are in a relationship with someone for four YEARS and you’re scared that he doesn’t want to have sex anymore!? That is more concerning to you than the fact that he might not love you anymore? I stopped reading there, but I did go on to skim and to learn what happens, hope my interest would be caught by something… Needless to say, it wasn’t.
            I also dislike the set-up of the time scheme in this book. Whenever the characters go off on a tangent, they do. And then without warning, the author throws you right back into the “action” of the book. It’s confusing and it takes a moment to register.
            I think, however, with a LOT of editing, this book has potential. The philosophical ideas are a lot in this book, beat to death, but I think if they were hinted at, stated once maybe, narrowed down, it would be much easier to handle. I think, also, if the author took the time to focus on the more important bits in the novel, like the developing of relationships (and not just fast forwarding over 4 years of what the reader can assume was happy time between Cole and Malachi)…. I think those were the most important plot and character issues. It really does need a lot of editing, but there is potential in the story. And in the end, that’s what matters. 

Rating: ★★ 2/5 Stars

Guest Post & Review: Back to You by Natalie-Nicole Bates

Back to You








Title: Back to You
Author: Natalie-Nicole Bates

Summary: On the surface, Lynsey Reznor seems to have it all. She is beautiful, brilliant, and a successful true-crime writer who has been living the past decade in Miami. But what Lynsey lacks is what she needs the most—a family.

After the death of her mother, and yet another failed relationship, Lynsey makes an impulsive decision to return to her hometown of Unity. But Unity will present its own bittersweet memories, most notably, her first love, Nick Lincoln.

Twenty years ago, Nick broke teenager Lynsey’s heart when he decided to marry another. He had his own private reasons—reasons he never explained to Lynsey. Now she is back, along with a chance to reclaim her love. But Lynsey wants answers from him that he may never be able to give out of duty and guilt.



Natalie-Nicole Bates has been kind enough to let us read and review her book, Back to You on her blog tour. Today she has brought us an interview with her main character, Lynsey Reznor.


Today I’m pleased to get a chance to visit with my heroine, Lynsey Reznor, from my contemporary romance Back To You. Lynsey is going is going to talk a bit about her reasons for leaving Unity when she was a teenager.

NNB: Lynsey, thank you for agreeing to talk about your early years in Unity. Can you tell me about your life before you left at sixteen?

LR: Well, the only family I had was my mother. My father died when I was young—I don’t remember him. I had a normal childhood, I guess. My mother was always there for me. I loved her tremendously.

NNB: I understand you have always been a whip-smart cookie!

LR: I suppose so. I skipped over two grades, so I was actually sixteen in my senior year of high school.

NNB: When you were sixteen, you were offered a scholarship to a school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Did you feel torn between accepting the scholarship and staying on in Unity?

LR: Sixteen was a difficult age for me. I developed a crush on my best friend Suzy’s brother, Nick. I thought he liked me as well, but…he chose to peruse a relationship with another girl.

NNB: That must have hurt very much.

LR: My first love, my first heartbreak. It caused me to rebound to another guy.

NNB: Caleb Smith?

LR: Yes, Caleb. A decent guy, but he pressured me for a commitment I wasn’t ready for.

NNB: So you fled Unity?

LR: Pretty much. But I certainly don’t regret it. I even stayed on in Switzerland an additional four years. I feel quite grateful to have been able to travel and be educated in Europe. My French became fluid and effortless, and I learned to ski. All in all, a great life experience.

NNB: I heard there was also a romance with an Olympic ice hockey player?

LR: Ah…Jean-Luc. How I did enjoy my time with him. But the relationship ran in its course. We do remain friends to this day. He’s a coach with an NHL team now. Every time his team came to Florida we always would get together for dinner and speak to each other in nothing but French. He is still the smoothest man I’ve ever known.

NNB: Sounds like fun. Do you miss Miami yet?

LR: Not really. Like my time with Jean-Luc, my time in Miami was great while it lasted, but a thing of the past nonetheless. I am happy, excited, and looking forward to returning to my hometown of Unity.

NNB: Much luck, Lynsey, I wish you nothing but the best and I hope you find everything you are looking for in Unity.

Read more about Lynsey and her life in Unity in Back To You, available now at Bradley Publishing!

Back to you is available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bradley Publishing.

~

Review: This book, if anything, was a short story. I’m really disappointed in reading this novel and I almost wish that I hadn’t. It’s not because of the fact that it was a bad novel, although it really had its dull moments. The thing that I disliked about this ‘novel’ more than anything was that it had the potential to be a really, really amazing novel, but it fell so very short of its potential.

Back to You started off right with plot line, and while that could be alright in most books, it wasn’t okay in this one. The plot line started off and we knew nothing about the characters, but then all of a sudden we were learning everything about the characters and yet we were learning nothing of intense importance. It was important to learn that Nick had lost his wife, and it was important to learn why Lynsey had moved back to her hometown, Unity, but we didn’t learn things that were actually potentially important about the characters. It took halfway into the book for me to learn exactly what type of writing Lynsey did and when the author initially mentioned that there was a ‘new division’ in Unity, I thought it meant her job, not a housing division.

In addition to that, everyone and their mother was a cop. Street cop, detective, sergeant. Every single guy that was interested in Lynsey had or was in the police force one way or another. The town didn’t seem that big of a town either, so it made absolutely no sense that three people that she’d initially known since childhood were in the police force and then there was another man who she knew from somewhere else who was also in the force. It felt like an overdose of police and it made me wonder if anyone else in the town did anything other than work for the police.

For a novel that wasn’t even 30,000 words, it had a surprising amount of insignificant detail. I mean, it was a great concept to have our Mary Sue (Lynsey) visit her injured friend, Evan (another of the males who was not only on the police force but was also after her), but there was absolutely nothing about Suzy’s divorce that had any relevance to the novel. I breezed through this, mainly looking for a reason to get it done and over with.

Between the bad quality of the PDF (putting the PDF on my Kindle completely ruined the formatting and made it difficult to read) and the downright ridiculousness of the concept of four guys hunting after a girl who clearly had her heart set on the man she’d been in love with since she was sixteen, I felt like I was reading a bad soap opera. Nick and Lynsey exchanged these little sentences that ended or started with words like ‘sweetheart’, ‘honey’ and ‘my angel’ which made it so very obvious that they were meant for each other at the beginning of the novel. And the attempt at sex scenes in here… It was like watching a car crash; terrible, horrible, but unable to look away for fear of missing something important to write about in the review.

Overall, I managed to finish the novel, so I didn’t despise it, but it really could have been something had the author actually sat down and gone over this with some thought and edited it a heck of a lot more. Back to You had the potential to be an amazing novel, but instead it was just a boring, lukewarm short story that made me want to fall asleep rather than read it.

Rating: ★★ 2/5 Stars