Shattered Mirror: An Eve Duncan Novel (Eve Duncan, 23)
Shattered Mirror: An Eve Duncan Novel (Eve Duncan, 23) book cover

Shattered Mirror: An Eve Duncan Novel (Eve Duncan, 23)

Hardcover – April 24, 2018

Price
$16.11
Format
Hardcover
Pages
352
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250075864
Dimensions
6.4 x 1.12 x 9.12 inches
Weight
1.14 pounds

Description

Praise for Iris Johansen: " A tantalizing puzzle ...fans of paranormal suspense will be rewarded." ― Publishers Weekly “This first-rate novel of romantic suspense will please Johansen’s many fans and newcomers alike. ” ― Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) on Hide Away “ Sure to appeal to all fans of romantic suspense. ” ― Publishers Weekly on Night and Day “Eve Duncan novels by Johansen are so good that, supernatural or not, readers and fans remain completely engaged. ” ― Suspense Magazine on Shadow Play “Delivering gut-wrenching emotion and spine-tingling suspense is what Johansen does best, and when you add in a touch of the supernatural...you get the perfect storm of a thriller! Johansen never disappoints! ” ― RT Book Reviews on Your Next Breath Iris Johansen is the New York Times bestselling author of Chasing the Night , Blood Game , Eve , and Eight Days to Live , among others. She began writing after her children left home for college, and first achieved success in the early 1980s writing category romances. In 1991, she began writing suspense historical romance novels, and in 1996 she turned to crime fiction, with which she has had great success. She lives near Atlanta, Georgia. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Shattered Mirror By Iris Johansen St. Martin's Press Copyright © 2018 Johansen Publishing LLLPAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-1-250-07586-4 CHAPTER 1 The lights in the lake cottage sent out a cozy glow that lit the banks of the lake and made that house of death appear welcoming. Everything about the place and property spoke of beauty and a deceptive invitation that made one think that all was well with this world. Because she was there, Rory Norwalk thought, as he moved a few steps closer, his gaze on the cottage. She was the heart of the house, the one who destroyed the balance, who had ruined everything when she could have saved. She claimed that she was a mender, a fixer, but Norwalk knew that was all lies. He was the one who would fix what was broken. Eve Duncan only interfered and made a mockery of what was true and right. But that was going to stop; he couldn't permit it any longer. Laughter ... He stepped back in the shadow of the trees as a Jeep drove up into the driveway. It was the father and the son. It was the little boy who had laughed. He laughed a lot; careless, joyous laughter that was as deceptive as this house. How could he be joyous when he lived with that woman who was so evil? Because he was evil, too? Norwalk had suspected it and was almost certain that the boy, Michael, would have to be fixed. "Stay here," Joe Quinn told his son as he got out of the car and started up the porch steps. "I'll do it, but you'll owe me, Michael. She told you not to do it again." "He wouldn't listen," Michael protested. "I tried, Dad. Just explain so that she won't get upset. Okay?" "No, it's not okay. But I'll call you in after I break it to her." He'd reached the porch, and he looked back down at the little boy in the car. "You sit there and think about what you're going to say to your mother. And you start off with telling her that you're not going to do it again." "But I may have to do it again," the little boy said quietly. "I can't lie to her." Joe Quinn sighed. "No, you can't. We'll think of something." He disappeared into the house. Leaving the little boy alone in the car. The boy was not often left alone, Norwalk knew. He was only six, and his mother was very careful since they lived on the lake. And Joe Quinn was a police detective, and he was wary of everything and everyone. Was this moment of abandonment meant to be a sign to Norwalk? It was not why he was here, though he'd mentally already accepted that down the road it must be done. He was very quick, and children were so gullible. It would only take a few moments. He instinctively moved faster through the trees, his gaze on the boy in the Jeep. But the boy was no longer in the Jeep. He'd gotten out of the vehicle and was standing on the last porch step. He was dressed in jeans and a navy-blue sweatshirt and his legs were slightly parted. The light from the porch light was burnishing his red-brown hair as if it were a copper helmet. Helmet? Why had that word occurred to him, Norwalk wondered. It was because the boy's bearing looked almost military, he realized. He looked like a soldier guarding a fortress. Ridiculous. As ridiculous as the idea that the boy was looking directly to where Norwalk was standing under the trees and could see him. It was pitch-dark, there was no way he could be seen. But that little boy knew he was there. And he was not afraid. Norwalk instinctively faded farther back in the trees. Oh, he had been right to judge that Michael Quinn would also have to be taken out before that cozy house would be cleansed of all that was broken. But not right now. Just a little longer, Sean. I'm just as eager as you, but we have to keep to the plan, don't we? And all good things came to he who was willing to wait. * * * "Lord, you smell good." Joe slid his hands around Eve's waist from behind. "Fried onions and bacon. Is there any scent more appetizing?" "It depends if you're hungry." She turned around and went into his arms. "Not exactly an alluring perfume if the aim is seduction." "Is that the aim? If it is, you must have gotten the reconstruction off today." She nodded. "This afternoon." She chuckled. "But since when did work stop us?" She leaned back, and her gaze narrowed on his face. "And since when did you decide to pussyfoot around instead of coming out with what you're thinking?" He sighed. "I was trying for mellow and soothing. I promised Michael I'd do my best." She went still. "Do your best to do what?" "Break it to you gently." "Joe." "He has a few bruises and a swollen lip." "What?" She pushed him away. "Who?" "Same kid." She swore beneath her breath. "Same reason?" He nodded. "He did what you told him to do. The kid wouldn't listen. Boys aren't usually receptive to persuasion or reason at that age." "He's a bully." "And a head taller than Michael. I saw this Gary Walden when I picked Michael up from soccer practice tonight." "That's the third time that he's come home with bruises. The soccer coach should have stepped in and stopped it." "Probably didn't know about it. Michael wouldn't complain. You know that." Yes, she knew very well that Michael would keep his silence. Her son would quietly take whatever came his way and try to work his way through to a solution. That had been the way he handled problems from the time he was a toddler. Only this time the punishment he was taking was because of her, dammit. "Maybe I should talk to this Gary's mother." "Which might make it worse for Michael." And that was why she had been avoiding doing that. "Kids can be savages." "Absolutely," Joe said. "And TV and pop culture have led them to think that to latch onto something out of the ordinary and make fun of it is the way to go. But Michael will get bigger and stronger." His lips tightened. "I've signed him up for a karate class. And a few more lessons in karate from me will even out the odds in the meantime. The problem will go away." Her lips twisted. "And this Gary will no longer tell Michael his mother is some kind of a ghoul who collects skulls for a hobby?" "Not where Michael can hear him." He smiled. "Come on, you're the foremost forensic sculptor in the world. What difference does it make what that kid says?" "It matters if it hurts Michael." "It doesn't hurt Michael," Joe said. "You know that, Eve. He's only worried that it will upset you." His hand reached out and touched her cheek. "That's why he wanted me to break those damn bruises to you. He only wants to make certain that nothing ever hurts you." He leaned forward, kissed her gently, and drew her close. "That's what we all want. You know how smart Michael is. So give him a little time to work this out for himself." "He's only six, Joe." Her words were muffled against his chest. "Going on thirty. You've always known he's not like other kids." Yes, she'd known from the time Michael had been conceived that he was wonderful and special and he had never disappointed her. He was superintelligent and had the sweetest nature on the planet. But that didn't mean it wasn't her job to keep on protecting him. She had lost her daughter, Bonnie, who was only seven when she had died after being taken. It had nearly broken her heart. Michael was almost that age now, and whenever she thought about it, the fear returned. Block it. It wasn't fair to Michael to live anything but a full and joyous life. "Yeah, I know. But maybe I'm not quite as grown up. I need a little bolstering on occasion." She pushed him away. "Okay, I suppose you left him outside until you paved the way for him?" Joe nodded. "In the Jeep. I told him I'd give him a call when you were ready for him." "I'm always ready for him." She headed for the front door. "Watch the potatoes for me, Joe?" "Sure." He turned back to the stove. "Tell him, I did my best." "He knows that you would." She smiled back at him. "And you'd better be quick about getting him very good at that karate. I don't know how many of these sessions I can take." "An eternity," he said softly. "I know you, Eve." He was right, she thought. There were no limits for her where Michael was concerned. She went out on the porch. "Okay, Michael. Come out and face the music. Your father has given me the lowdown and he tried to —" She stopped. Michael was not in the Jeep, and there was something about the way he was standing on that bottom step that was ... odd. "Michael?" He turned and gave her a radiant smile that lit his entire face. "I'm coming, Mama." He turned and ran up the stairs. "I was just looking out at the lake. It's pretty tonight, isn't it?" He hugged her. "I'm hungry. Can we eat before you yell at me about Gary?" She held him close for an instant. "That might be possible." She released him and opened the front door. "I thought you might want to stay out here on the porch and have it out first." "Nah." His smile took on a hint of mischief. "I know Dad made sure that you wouldn't be too mad at me. He's a guy, too. He knows about these things." He glanced at the lake and woods, then turned and headed for the door. "I don't want to stay out here. I'd rather go in with you and eat supper ..." * * * "Okay, talk to me," Eve said as she cuddled Michael closer to her on the couch after supper. "I told you that if you couldn't handle Gary yourself, you were to go to your teacher. Why didn't you do it?" "He would have got in trouble." "Exactly." "And he didn't hurt me that bad. He was just scared." "He didn't act very scared," she said dryly as she touched his bruised cheek. "And your dad said he's much bigger than you." He nodded. "But he's still scared." She looked down at him with narrowed eyes. "Why?" "Because I'm not afraid of what you do, and he is," he said simply. She stiffened. "That ghoul name he called me?" "His dad was killed in a car wreck last year. Gary's all confused, and he doesn't like to think about it. I make him think about it. All those skulls that you work on bother him." "No, I make him think about it." Her arm tightened around him. "I was wondering if it was my fault. I didn't know about his father. Maybe I should go talk to his mother." He shook his head. "It would only make her feel bad. Sometime, Gary will let me talk to him about you. Then it will be okay." "But it's not okay now. And what can you say to him that will make it okay then?" "I'll tell him that you work on those skulls to bring those people home. That they're lost, and you have to help them." He looked up at her. "That's what you told me that first time I asked you. Remember?" "I don't remember you asking me." She smiled. "But maybe you did. You always seemed to understand my work and why I was doing it." She did remember Michael coming close to her worktable when he was only a couple years old and touching the skull of a young girl she was reconstructing. There had been such gentleness, such intensity of thought in his expression that she had been stunned. Then, after a moment, he had smiled and gone back to his toys across the room. "I don't like the idea of waiting around until this Gary comes to his senses on his own. I may have to take action if you won't." He nodded. "I know. But I think it's going to be okay. He doesn't like what he's doing to me. It scares him almost as much as the stuff he won't ask me about your skulls and the people who are dead like his dad." And how had Michael realized that? Eve just had to accept that he did. She had stopped trying to understand where those flashes of deep understanding came from. Even before the moment of his birth she had known that Michael possessed a kind of psychic connection with her, and who knew what other depths he might have? She didn't believe he wanted her to know, or maybe he didn't know himself. Either way, most of the time Michael appeared to be just a bright, happy six-year-old who was perfectly content in his life. It was only with her and Joe that he let his guard down and was totally honest. She hoped. There were moments when she wasn't certain that Michael was entirely open even with them. It didn't matter as long as she knew that Michael loved them both, they could work on everything else. "It's bad for Gary to think he can hurt you. I don't want him to turn into a bully or you a victim. So you'll try one more time, then I'll have a talk with him." She held up her hand. "Not his mother. Okay?" Michael nodded. "He's close to it, Mama. It's the death thing. He's missing his dad. It scares him." "Then we'll try to explain and make the fear go away." She gave him a kiss on the forehead and got to her feet. "Now go take your shower and get to bed." He grinned as he jumped to his feet. "Soon as I say good night to Dad." He headed toward the back of the house. "And tell him that you didn't yell too much at me. He'll want to know." He turned back. "Did Cara send me that CD of her last concert that she promised me last week?" She nodded. "Morning mail. It's on your nightstand. You can play it through once. Just once. Then you turn it off and go to sleep." "Once is enough. After that, it will play in my head until I fall asleep. It does that to you, too, doesn't it, Mama?" "Yes." Cara Delaney was Eve and Joe's ward and one of the most magnificent violinists Eve had ever heard. She was only eighteen and a student at Carnegie Tech in New York, but she had already been a guest artist at several venues, and this CD was the one from a benefit concert at the university in Phoenix. She had been with them since before Michael was born, and Eve could not have wanted a more devoted or loving sister for her son. The two talked every week on the phone, and when Cara managed to come home, they were practically inseparable. "She texted me and said she might have a break next week or the week after." "She's coming home?" His face lit up. "That would be great. When will she know?" Eve shrugged. "Soon. She's trying to arrange things. We'll know when she does. She asked if Jane was going to be able to get away at the same time. She might be trying to coordinate her time with Jane's." But Jane MacGuire, her adopted daughter, had a schedule that was almost tighter than Cara's. She was an artist and her agent had her constantly making public appearances at galley exhibits in London. "I don't think she has a chance. Jane's supposed to be in Paris all this month." Michael looked disappointed. "Maybe." Eve nodded. "Maybe. But at least we'll have Cara. You know Jane gets here whenever she can." "Yes. I just miss her." He turned and started back down the hall. "It would be nice ..." More than nice, Eve thought. She believed in family and having Jane and Cara out in the world and not being able to see them as much as she'd like brought a constant ache. But she was being selfish, she couldn't have everything. Life was so incredibly good these days with Joe and Michael, and the occasional visits from Cara and Jane were like additional jewels in the crown. So she would accept what she was given with thanks and enjoy every single minute. She flipped open her computer on the coffee table and checked for recent requests from police departments around the country. She usually did that on the day she sent the latest reconstruction back to its originator. She had a tremendous backlog of requests, but if anything appeared urgent that couldn't — "Be back in ten minutes or so." Joe had come out of the bedroom and was slipping on his jacket. "Just want to check on something." "Check on what?" "A bear." Her eyes widened. "What?" "Michael thought he saw a bear earlier tonight in the woods on that west bank." "He never mentioned it to me." "But you were too busy giving him a lecture. He probably didn't have time." He headed for the door. "And it's probably nothing. It was pretty dark out there. I don't know how he could see anything." "But you're checking it anyway." "He hit me where I live." He smiled at her. "He asked if maybe I should tell you that you shouldn't go around the lake until I was sure." He opened the door. "What could I say? Be right back." Eve watched the door shut behind him. A bear? Strange. Yet there had been that moment when she had first seen Michael on that bottom step, and she had been aware of a tense ... alertness. A bear? There had been no bear sightings in this area for the last couple years. Michael had thought something was wrong and had not spoken to her but gone to his father and told him he should protect her. She could hear Michael's shower running now. He had finished with what he had wanted to do with Joe and was going about his life. Yet he had thought something was wrong ... She instinctively moved toward the front door. And that wrong must not touch Joe. Whenever Joe went into the woods, he was always armed, but she didn't like him to be alone out there. She stood on the porch, her eyes straining toward the west bank. (Continues...) Excerpted from Shattered Mirror by Iris Johansen . Copyright © 2018 Johansen Publishing LLLP. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • Silencing Eve
  • comes
  • Shattered Mirror,
  • an explosive thriller featuring forensic sculptor Eve Duncan.
  • Forensic sculptor Eve Duncan is once again thrown into a deadly game of intrigue when she receives a cryptic package containing a skull and a two sided mirror. Eve is determined to reconstruct the skull and uncover the mystery of the person’s identity, and when she does, the face of a beautiful woman begins to emerge. But who is she?As Eve gets closer and closer to finding the answer, she becomes swept up in a lethal chase that spans continents and threatens to destroy the family that she has worked so hard to bring together. Eve and her team must work quickly to discover who is behind the murder – and maybe even prevent more loss of life. But how do you fight a killer who is willing to destroy anyone as a means to an end?No one is safe in bestselling author Iris Johansen’s next explosive, high-stakes thriller that will keep readers on the edge of their seat through every heart-pounding chapter.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1.6K)
★★★★
25%
(659)
★★★
15%
(395)
★★
7%
(185)
-7%
(-185)

Most Helpful Reviews

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I love this series

I have read all in the Eve Duncan series and most of the others and I have enjoyed them all this was no different. I loved Michael and I know that I cannot wait until there is more about him and hopefully he will come into his own like Caleb. Maybe he is a little to young for the blood thing but I sure hope it comes in later when he is older. There were just so many twists and turns that keep me turning the pages. Of course Jock is lethal when it comes to Cara, friends, and family and I always enjoy him. You should read this book/series if you get a chance.
2 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

mother in law LOVES THE BOOK..
1 people found this helpful
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but what I will say is that I’m a bit disappointed in the outcome

In my review of Night and Day, I commented that Eve Duncan’s unborn child showed indications of having ‘special’ talents. Well, in Shattered Mirror we all get to find out what ‘special’ talent that Eve’s six-year-old son, Michael, possesses. I’m not going to tell you what is, you will have to read the book to find out, but what I will say is that I’m a bit disappointed in the outcome. I was hoping maybe for something like, x-ray vision, telekinesis, or mind control, but I am afraid it is not quite as exciting as that, but it is special. Then again, he is only six, so who knows.

Once again, Eve Duncan is the target of an evil killer because of her dangerous occupation as a forensic sculptor. Of course, it is not enough for the killer to go after Eve, but her friends and family as well. Both A-1 violinist, Cara Delaney, and Michael are in his cross-hairs. As you can imagine, Eve is not about to take this lightly, and calls out the infantry which includes; FBI/Cop/ex-Navy seal husband, Joe Quinn, assassin extraordinaire, Jock Gavin, as well as two newcomers, Russian mafia head, Sergai Kaskov, and Cara’s college roommate and friend, Darcy Nichols, a gorgeous blue-eyed actress.

Naturally, no Eve Duncan novel would be complete without a little romance. Cara is now eighteen and she is realizing that her best friend, Jock Gavin, is a hunk of a man. There is nothing better to get those pheromones flowing than having a killer chasing after you (wink, wink).

Shattered Mirror is a great beach read and a way to blow off a lazy weekend. Though this could be read as a standalone novel, I would recommend reading the trilogy; Shadow Play, Hide Away, and Night and Day to get a good background on Cara Delaney and Sergai Kaskov. And Countdown, to get a better background on Jock Gavin.
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Shattered Mirror

Shattered Mirror: Iris Johansen
Fear is a powerful weapon when creating discord and unraveling a family’s security. Revenge can have its on place but when someone decides to create a powerful strategy and take down someone he feels wronged him by just saying no to something he wanted done you have a diabolical plot that will know no boundaries and won’t end until the final coffin is placed six feet below the ground. Iris Johansen allows readers to hear and witness the convoluted, diabolical and torturous well thought out plan of a man that would haunt Eve Duncan’s mind, body and soul until he finds his way six feet under.
Rory Korwalk is a sick and sadistic killer who wants to get back at Eve for not doing a reconstruction on a skull belonging to someone close to him. Rather than face her squarely in person he has the skull sent to her in a gold box. This would start a chain of events that will stupefy and horrify Eve and Joe endangering everyone close to them and possibly costing someone’s life within their own family circle.
Not wanting her to do the reconstruction she manages to convince the police to allow her to work on her but why does her son Michael, want to call the skull Sylvie?
Cara Delaney is Eve and Joe’s ward or adopted daughter who attends a prestigious music conservatory or school in New York and has been placed with Darcy Nichols as a roommate. Both have relationship issues and yet they manage to bond. Jock Gavin is someone who adores and protects Cara at all costs and when dealing with him he’s no match for her tenacious and persistent attitude. Cara and Darcy are both in the music field. Cara is a virtuoso on the violin and Darcy a singer and actress. Each one dealing with her own specialty. But, Cara is related to a mafia king who happens to be her grandfather and this is where things get interesting and dangerous.
Vulnerability is something that both Joe and Eve never realize when Joe tells Michael to remain in the pickup trust while speaking to Eve about a bully named Gary who seems bent on tormenting Michael. But, Michael is curious and decides to venture out on the porch. Perceptive, astute and smart he realizes that there is something in the woods and it’s presumed to be a bear. In reality it’s the box with the skull and a broken mirror has been placed inside with a skull that is completely burned. The reconstruction is completed and Cara is set to come home and Jock is concerned about her safety with a visit to her Grandfather coming up the next month. Going to a concert and seeing him in her dorm Cara did not realize that she is being followed. Added to that her room is bugged and then she’s attacked when entering the room alone. Jock is in a rage and with the insistence of Eve and Joe she is forced to leave before her next performance and takes Darcy along with her to meet her new family. Kaskov is the name she calls the killer and her grandfather is linked to her attack and the murders to follow. The shocks start to reverberate when Eve meets Darcy and she comes face to face with the same face as Sylvie. When the shock wears off Eve and Darcy talk about what happened to Sylvie and the ramifications of what is about happen next as they realize that there is much more to this than both of them being twins
Darcy’s reaction is quite remarkable and when she explains that she is a twin and that the face staring up at everyone is her sister things take on a different turn. Learning about her childhood, her mother who cared for her and placed Sylvie as second, did not change the fact that Darcy adored her sister. Hard to believe that their mother Felicity was close to Norwalk and would bring her sister to someone in order to have her killed but why? The answer is in the word TWIN and the truth will be revealed as you the reader and Eve Duncan hears the voice of this sadistic killer explain what he has planned for her, her family and anyone that gets in his way. So, why does she enlist the help of Kaslov and why are they all moving to his compound? Jock is the catalyst in this along with Joe Quinn who seems to have it all under control but Eve loses it at all times and seems unhinged when Cara and Michael are involved . Mirrors offer reflections of us so that we can see clearer picture of who we are when looking straightforward at our reflection. But, when both Darcy and Cara look what exactly did they see? What is the significance of the two-sided mirror?
Listening to Kaslov extend his terms, learning more about Nikolai and his role we also realize that Jock is quite capable of breaching his security measures, showing up in the compound and using his skills to let Kaslov know that he’s vulnerable. When Joe enters the compound he and Kaslov have an interesting faceoff.
A plan comes into place as Darcy feels the need to help with their plans to take down Norwalk as she blames herself because of her sister when in reality it was her mother who brought her sister to her death but did she really know what she was doing? When Jock and Joe contact different members of their team for information they are informed that Norwalk has eliminated quite a few more including one of Kaslov’s guards. With Jock dealing with security and Norwalk demanding that Eve fall prey to his plan to destroy her, author Iris Johansen creates a plot to take down a killer what will bring not only Eve to her knees in danger but Cara, Michael, Joe and Darcy too. The ending is terrifying and the final outcome will blow your mind as Eve takes on a killer and Darcy uses her skills in a way you won’t believe as truths, lies, betrayals, hate, revenge and family loyalties and friendships are tested when Cara and Michael are face to face with a killer and a 6 year old boy refuses to become a victim when the final shot is fired who remains alive? Twins have a special sense and almost read each other’s minds even when apart as Darcy realizes that Sylvie is always there for her and the faces in the mirror will always be the same and even though the glass is broken and the chards are inside the golden box no one can ever really take away the true images in the SHATTERED MIRROR!
1 people found this helpful
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Didn't look new like it said it was.

[[VIDEOID:4b352835c7ed2f3e0c85157ac3c0d6e]] There was tape on the book which if it's new wouldn't have. The pages look worn already and stained yellow looking.
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Great book

This author always delivers the suspense!
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Good read

Great book. Really enjoyed it.
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Love this entire series

Love this entire series
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Unrealistic characters

The characters are under developed and not at all interesting. The phrase " He/She twisted their lips" is used dozens of times. How do you twist your lips. The story line is also helter-skelter and hard to follow. Conversations are so confusing one has to go back and reread them to understand who is speaking and what they are talking about. Definitely would not recommend this book.
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Great book

A book you don't want to put down. Would recommend it to any avid reader.