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The PushPress Timer is the cleanest, easiest, most amazeballingest Timer out there. Built with high...

Sin in the Second City: Madams, Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America's Soul
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Step into the perfumed parlors of the Everleigh Club, the most famous brothel in American...

FloSports: Watch Live Sporting Events
Entertainment, Events and Sports
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The FloSports app gives die-hard sports fans access to live stream their favorite events from...

Ianseo Scorekeeper Lite
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Time-Crunched Cyclist: Race-Winning Fitness in 6 Hours a Week
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The Time-Crunched Cyclist reveals the fastest way to get fit for road racing, century rides, gravel...
Women's Lives: A Psychological Exploration
Claire A. Etaugh and Judith S. Bridges
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This cutting-edge and comprehensive fourth edition of Women's Lives: A Psychological Perspective...
Women's Lives: A Psychological Exploration
Claire A. Etaugh and Judith S. Bridges
Book
This cutting-edge and comprehensive fourth edition of Women's Lives: A Psychological Perspective...

Evvie Drake Starts Over
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Boxing Timer G - Boxing Workout interval round timer
Sports and Health & Fitness
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Boxing Timer G has been purchased by athletes in more than 50 countries and is a sport timer app...

Kristy H (1252 KP) rated Strike Me Down in Books
Apr 23, 2020
"Five days. Twenty million dollars. The pressure was indisputably on."
The book, however, was focused more on personalities, with much of the story told via Nora and Greg's eyes. This would have been fine, but I never really felt much of a connection with either of these characters. Or Logan Russo, either, despite her portrayal as a dynamic, forceful heroine who has impacted a generation of kickboxers and athletes. Nora makes a series of bad decisions and seems oddly obsessed with Logan for no real reason--a weird focus that is never really explained. She has a past that has led her to her role in forensic accounting, but it never really leads to much in the end. Greg is a focused businessman on the outs with his wife, and I never felt much sympathy with him. And Logan, as mentioned, who is supposed to be the core of this book, just falls flat until nearly the end of the novel.
"For forty years she'd been invisible, a quality she'd not only taken for granted, but turned into her greatest asset. She was the unseen eye, the counter nobody counted, who wove numbers into dark and avaricious stories."
Overall, the book is just weird. I feel bad putting that in a review without much further explanation, but I don't want to put spoilers. It's strange. Yes, it's compelling, in some ways, but I never felt like I needed to get back to reading it. I was interested about what happened to the money, but also had a good inkling early on about what really went down (and was proved right). Maybe if you connect more with the characters, this will be a true page-turner. It's still a tense read and different, for sure. I did enjoy the ending, and I actually felt something for the characters there. Therefore, this one squeaks by at 3 stars.