
The Next to Die
Book
The New York Times bestselling author of The Monogram Murders and Woman with a Secret returns with a...
Fiction Mystery Thriller Psychological
We Are the Ants
Book
From the "author to watch" (Kirkus Reviews) of The Five Stages of Andrew Brawley comes an "equal...

The Wish Granter (Ravenspire 2)
Book
An epic, romantic, and action-packed fantasy inspired by the tale of Rumpelstiltskin, about a...

The Sieve (Drakon Book 1)
Book
“The Sieve” is Book I of the epic fantasy novel Drakon. “I am here to redeem the lives of my...

Where I'll Find You
Book
We’re all a little broken sometimes. Nobody knows this better than the beautiful and...
Coming_of_Age Contemporary New_Adult

The Time of My Life
Book
Denver is determined to realize his lifelong dream of becoming a singer. That's why entering in The...
Contemporary M_M Romance

Found Innocent (Detective Madison Knight Series Book 4)
Book
She wanted to leave her past behind, but it may have followed her… A young woman’s remains...
series crime fiction mystery police procedural Carolyn Arnold
So not the cheeriest subject, but the way it was written - and the narration by Imogen Church - was what made me empathise with Ally. And the situations Ally found herself in were so relatable. I felt really mean laughing at her and Jeremy going out for their first few runs, but they were hilarious (and I’ve been there too!).
I even found myself talking to Ally (should I own up to this, and the fact that I was wearing headphones at the time?!), and was helpfully reminded by the 17 year old, that telling a fictitious character not to email her ex-girlfriend was pretty pointless. I stand by what I said though!
I loved this book, and it brightened my day for a week of dog walks and (the dreaded) dinner preparation!
Recommended!
Many thanks to Quercus for my original e-copy (even though I listened to it on Audible!).

ClareR (5950 KP) rated True Story in Books
Jan 16, 2022
Out of all the boys on the lacrosse team, Nick also struggles with the consequences of that night. Whilst he wasn’t in the car, he feels the guilt of those boys’ actions, and he slips into alcoholism as a result (there may well be other reasons as well, but this is what I read into it).
I think I probably inhaled this book. It’s one of those that you start and then find it very difficult to put down. I loved the jumps in presentation, particularly the screenplays. I was urging Alice to stand up for herself and walk out of her dangerous relationship.
It’s a fascinating novel that I’d most definitely recommend.