View this post on InstagramA post shared by ⢠Sarah Barfield ⢠(@thenashvillewifereads) on
Advertisement
author: Katherine Center
publisher: St. Martins Press
A book with a story to tell that hasnât settled on what type it wants to be is a little how I felt about How to Walk Away. If I had to pick, I would say it was a combination of Contemporary Fiction (aka Family Drama-lite-) meets Womenâs Fiction meets Chick-Lit and it truly doesnât know who it wants to be.
I toyed back and forth with giving this a 4 star review, a 3 star, or somewhere in the middle and landed on 3 stars. Hereâs why..
There were a LOT of goosebumps going on. There were truly some good, deep moments where I genuinely appreciated the authorâs writing. She didnât always tie a neat bow at the end of everything (almost, but not always and certainly not on the most important part). She, many times, made me feel like this was true to life in some ways. SOME ways.
I could technically claim 2.5 stars on some of this stuff but Iâll give it 3 because this IS chick-lit(ish) and so I need to be fair and judge off that. But there were too many times, in my opinion, where the author made it far too simple. A lot of glossing over of emotions, accepting things for what they are, and certain unemotional responses to where there should be something. She always made sure to throw it in there, it wasnât just some emotional empty hole, but it was like âoh yeah and I was pissed. See me throw this. Okay weâre good now .I told you I was angry , letâs move on.â And She didnât seem to stay consistent within that.
Overall, for the first time ever, I think I understand now when people say an author manipulated their emotions. I donât feel like Katherine Center necessarily manipulated me but I do feel like instead of making this a great story just by excellent writing (which I know she is no doubt capable of), it was a good story based mostly off all the feels the book gave you. That was the heart of it. I donât want that in a book. I want it to be real.
All this to say I will still pick up the next book Katherine Center writes. She is a good writer and Iâm looking forward to seeing more of what she has to offer. Thank you for the work you do!
View all my reviews
Author: Anna Pitoniak
To be selfish. To be cruel, at times.
To harden your heart so that you need no one else.
When you realize how powerful this makes you,
you keep it to yourself.
Stella Bradley and Violet Trapp have been inseparable most of their lives. The stunning beauty, Stella is a traveler, though that is putting is loosely. With no direction in life, she wanders from place to place, living the life so many dream of without a care in the world. But is she happy? And when she sees life for what it is, is it enough living in the shadows of a family name?
Violet Trapp is exactly what her name leads you to believe. Trapped in a world for so long that was aggressive, perhaps even violent. Her parents were an awful sort, the kind you leave behind and never turn back. Violet is a beautiful girl with nothing to lose. Aren’t they the most dangerous, after all?
These two girls have a specific dynamic that, when kept perfectly in sync, works flawlessly. But when times change and the dynamics shift, trouble looms and in the end, whoever has the most ambition wins.
I gave this book 4 stars instead of 5 because I feel that the author (or the editor) could’ve made some transitions a bit more fluid. Below are just my thoughts but I did really enjoy the book. I liked the author’s writing style and would gladly read another.
Author: Tara Conklin
5 – breathtaking- stars
.
.
I was almost in tears when this book ended.
My heart was *shredded*. My chest ached. I yearned to go back in time, to resurrect these people, this family.
I made some friends tonight.
No, I became part of a family. A family named the Skinners…
.
.
Noni. Renee. Caroline. Joe. Fiona.
A family torn apart by tragedy.
A mother collapses.
Children survive scathed but not broken.