Showing posts with label Pocket Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pocket Books. Show all posts

Kresley Cole's 'Wicked Abyss' is Now Out in Paperback! #BookGiveaway



Wicked Abyss 
Author: Kresley Cole

A STAND-ALONE INSTALLMENT IN THE IMMORTALS AFTER DARK SERIES
AVAILABLE NOW in PAPERBACK!
This fairy tale doesn’t end with a kiss in this spellbinding Immortals After Dark tale from #1 New York Times bestselling author Kresley Cole!

The terrifying king of hell...

As a boy, Abyssian “Sian” Infernas had his heart shattered by a treacherous fey beauty who died before he could exact vengeance. Millennia later, a curse has transformed him into a demonic monster—just as she’s been reincarnated. Sian captures the delicate but bold female, forcing her back to hell.

Meets his match.

Princess Calliope “Lila” Barbot’s people have hated and feared Abyssian and his alliance of monsters for aeons. When the beastly demon imprisons her in his mystical castle, vowing revenge for betrayals she can’t remember, Lila makes her own vow: to bring down the wicked beast for good.

Can two adversaries share one happily-ever-after?

As Calliope turns hell inside out, the all-powerful Sian finds himself defenseless against his feelings for her. In turn, Lila reluctantly responds to the beast’s cleverness and gruff vulnerability. But when truths from a far distant past are revealed, can their tenuous bond withstand ages of deceit, a curse, and a looming supernatural war?


Here at OUaT, we have 2 copies of Wicked Abyss to giveaway to our readers. Pocket Books has kindly offered 2 brand new paperback copies to giveaway. All you have to do is enter below and you'll be contacted via email, if you won.

Book Review: Second Chance Season by Liora Blake



Second Chance Season
Grand Valley #2
Author: Liora Blake
Reading Level: New Adult
Genre: Contemporary
Released: June 20th 2017
Review Source: Pocket Books

Garrett Strickland is unapologetically country, fiercely loyal, and perfectly happy with his job at the Hotchkiss Co-op. Garrett is all about living in the present and not dwelling in the past—even if he was once on his way to a lofty agricultural sciences degree that would guarantee the brightest of futures, only to end up back home when his old man died, leaving behind a debt-ridden family farm that was impossible to keep afloat. After that, it was easy to see why dreaming big wasn’t worth the heartache. And until he crosses paths with a city girl who’s hell-bent on kick-starting her own future, he’s sure that good enough is just that.

Cara Cavanaugh is ready for more from life, even if that means changing everything; including dumping her boyfriend of ten years, turning down a lucrative job at a major newspaper, and leaving behind the upscale suburbs of Chicago where she grew up. Now, she just has to pray that temporarily relocating to the middle of nowhere in Colorado will be the first step in building a career as a freelance journalist—all she has to do is prove she’s got what it takes to make a name for herself. Unfortunately, her tony country day school is as close to “country” as she’s ever been. But when a goodhearted guy who looks like he just stumbled out of a country music video offers to help, she ends up falling hard…and discovering that the perfect story is a love story. And it’s theirs.


Second Chance Season follows the story of Cara and Garrett. Cara who is leaving her life back in Chicago  for a chance at a new career opportunity in Hotchkiss, Colorado, a small farming town, where she'll get to do the writing she always wanted to do. Then there's Garrett, life after loss; loss of his father, his family home, and the drive to continue with school. He works at a comfortable job in Hotchkiss and just lives comfortably. Until one day Garrett sees a damsel in distress on the side of the road, one that is clearly not from this side of town, and turns around and sees what he can do. Then he is completely knocked off his boots by Cara.

Let me start by saying that this book was everything I needed at the moment, I've been in such a slump and it may have taken me a bit to get into but then all of a sudden it's 3am and I cannot put it down. It also may have something to do with the fact that Garrett reminded me SO MUCH of my husband. He may not have been a farmer but Garrett was a hunter and so is my husband. I even had him read some of the hunting passages and he then he didn't even want to give it back, “this author really knows what they're talking about, what book is this.” He was ready to read the whole thing. I had such a blast with Cara, especially when she went on the farms and started learning about the way of production. The drive these families had. The author made everything feel so authentic and hilarious. Then the steam she brought with Cara and Garrett was off the charts. They both also spent a lot of time discovering who they wanted to be, where they wanted to end up, and I thoroughly enjoy watching our characters evolve like that on page. It puts more depth into the story and makes me feel like the characters are real, helps people relate to them more.

Second Chance Season was an epic ride. Hot hunters, smart driven chicks, and a very inquisitive cow. can't wait to get my hands on the next book, I can only imagine what Garrett’s friend, Braden, will get himself into. He is about to fall right on his ass in love. It'll be great.


Blog Tour: Sparking the Fire by Kate Meader



SPARKING THE FIRE
Hot in Chicago #3
Author: Kate Meader
Reading Level: New Adult
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Release Date: September 27, 2016
Review Source: Pocket Books



Kate Meader’s blazing Hot in Chicago firefighter series has “everything you want in a romance” (RT Book Reviews, Top Pick)! The flames of desire burn out of control in this sexy third novel when ex-lovers unexpectedly reunite for a sizzling affair that will have the director yelling, “Quiet on the set!”

Actor Molly Cade, America’s fallen sweetheart, finally has her shot at a Hollywood comeback with a dramatic new role as a tough-as-nails firefighter that promises to propel her back to the big time and restore her self-respect.

Wyatt Fox, resident daredevil at Engine Co. 6, needs a low-key job to keep him busy while he recovers from his latest rescue stunt. Consulting on a local movie shoot should add just enough spark to his day. Especially when in struts Molly Cade: the woman who worked his heart over good, and then left him in the Windy City dust.

Their story is straight out of a script: irrepressible, spunky heroine meets taciturn, smoldering hero. But these two refuse to be typecast, and when the embers of an old love are stoked, someone is bound to get burned…


The Story: Sparking the Fire starts out five years in the past where Molly Cade, a theater actress, has a week long fling with a very sexy stranger.  It isn't just any fling because she hasn't had any intensity to revival her time with the mysterious Marine since.  Molly goes away to Hollywood to pursue her dreams of becoming a movie star.  Skip ahead five years and Molly has had a very publicly failed marriage and has dealt with media scandals.  She wants to make a come back with her new film based on a female firefighter.  To make it truly authentic she reaches out to the best, professional fire fighters of Chicago, to help.  What she was not expecting was for the fire fighter hired help to be none other than her sexy fling that she has never forgotten.  He also happens to be the brother of the woman her movie is based on.

The Likes:  This is my first book that I have read by Kate Meader.  Due to coming in on book three, I feel like I did miss out on a few key points but I was not lost to the point of frustration.  I was able to quickly understand what was going on without any problems.  The chemistry between Molly Cade and Wyatt Fox WAS OFF THE CHARTS right from the prologue.  Wyatt, *sigggggh*, he is such an amazing hero.  I've always liked fire fighters but Wyatt takes the fire fighter sex appeal to a whole new level.  Not only is he a former Marine which is extremely sexy on its own, but then he chose to continue being a bad ass hero as a fire fighter.  Not only that but he is so mysterious and quiet at the same time.  Wyatt is a force to reckon with, without the cocky attitude that sometimes comes along with strong, alpha characters.

The Dislikes:  I felt like there was some cliches throughout the story.  I like there to be a little bit of a "fate" factor in the books I read but I also like a little bit of believe-ability.  Some things seemed too coincidental in my opinion.  Molly drove me a little crazy throughout the book as well.  Without giving away key points, I will just say, her attitude and treatment of Wyatt at times made me want to throw my book.

The Rating:  I am giving Sparking the Fire 4 stars.  I was extremely impressed by Kate's writing and her ability to hook you from the very beginning.  There were far more positives than negatives in my opinion and I would definitely recommend this book.  I will for sure be reading more from Kate, starting with the first two books in this series.



Book Spotlight: The Lie and the Lady by Kate Noble + Giveaway



The Lie and the Lady
Winner Takes All #2
Author: Kate Noble
Reading Level: Adult
Genre: Historical Fiction
Released: December 29th 2015
Publisher: Pocket Books

Following The Game and the Governess comes the second novel in the witty, sexy Winner Takes All series of Regency romances from Kate Noble, the writer behind the wildly popular, award-winning web series The Lizzie Bennet Diaries.

Clerk John Turner thought only of winning a bet when he switched places with his friend, Lord Edward Granville, at a country house party. But while posing as a lord, he fell for a lady—the Countess Letitia! Now she's learned the truth, and he must win her back as plain John Turner. He'd better hope that love truly conquers all...

Lady Letty was publicly humiliated when it came out that she had fallen for the man, not the master. When she meets him again, she's determined to avoid him, but some things are too intoxicating to be denied. Letty knows what choice she must make to survive, but if she turns her back on her dashing rogue—again—will she lose her chance at love forever?
With her usual witty writing and exquisite flair for characterization, Noble offers readers the second, splendid book in her Winner Takes All series. The effortless manner in which she wrote The Lie and the Lady as a separate love story while at the same time gracefully connecting it to The Game and the Governess (2014) and cleverly hinting at what is to come in the series is nothing less than brilliant.
Booklist Starred Review


Kate Noble is the national bestselling, RITA-nominated author of historical romances, including the acclaimed Blue Raven series and the Winner Takes All series. Her books have earned her numerous accolades, including comparisons to Jane Austen, which just makes her giddy.

In her other life as Kate Rorick, she is an Emmy-award winning writer of television and web series, having written for NBC, FOX, and TNT, as well as the international hit YouTube series The Lizzie Bennet Diaries. Kate lives in Los Angeles with her husband and son, and is hard at work on her next book.

   


ENTER TO WIN the first in the Winner Takes All series, The Game and the Governess! Open to US only.


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Book News: V.C. Andrews' My Sweet Audrina Book Cover & Trailer



WINTER PRELUDE TO A SUMMER FLING!

New York Times bestselling author of Flowers in the Attic…
MY SWEET AUDRINA
ISBN: 9781501138843
Pocket Books
December 29, 2015

MY SWEET AUDRINA, available December 29th, will be a Lifetime movie January 9th, 2016! WHITEFERN, the sequel to MY SWEET AUDRINA, will publish July 26th, 2016.
MY SWEET AUDRINA by V.C. Andrews® has been called “beautifully written, macabre, and thoroughly nasty” (Daily Express) and is the perfect winter prelude to Lifetime’s debut on January 9th, 2016 as well as the new sequel Whitefern (July 2016)—the summer fling to satisfy your hunger for more!

THE IDEA OF HER SISTER HOVERED ABOVE THEM ALL

Audrina fiercely desired to be as good as her sister. She knew her father could not love her as he loved that other girl, for her sister was so special, so perfect—and dead. Upstairs in a locked room awaited her sister’s clothes and dolls, her animals and games—and her sacred rocking chair. Now Audrina will rock and rock and rock to reclaim all her gone sister’s special gifts. And then finally she’ll learn the secrets everyone else knows but her.

One of the most popular storytellers of all time, V.C. Andrews layers psychological suspense with sheer terror in MY SWEET AUDRINA, a provocative thriller of family gone wrong.



Upcoming books:

MY SWEET AUDRINA, available December 29th, will be a Lifetime movie January 9th, 2016
S&S | AMAZON | B&N | BAM | INDIEBOUND | IBOOKSTORE | KINDLE | NOOK | GOOGLE PLAY

WHITEFERN, the sequel to MY SWEET AUDRINA, will publish July 26th, 2016
AMAZON | KINDLE

SAGE’S EYES will publish January 26th, 2016 
S&S | AMAZON | B&N | BAM | INDIEBOUND | IBOOKSTORE | KINDLE | NOOK | GOOGLE PLAY

The Dollanganger series (Flowers in the Attic) books 1, 2, 3 and 4 are Lifetime movies

The Mirror Sisters, book 1 of 3, will publish October 25th, 2016


About V.C. Andrews®:
V.C. Andrews® has been a bestselling phenomenon since the publication of her classic Flowers in the Attic. That blockbuster novel began her renowned Dollanganger family saga, which includes Petals on the Wind, If There Be Thorns, Seeds of Yesterday, and Garden of Shadows. Since then, readers have been captivated by more than seventy novels in V.C. Andrews’s bestselling series. V.C. Andrews’s novels have sold more than 106 million copies.


Read an Excerpt from STILL ALICE, Now a Major Motion Picture!



Still Alice written by Lisa Genova

Now a major motion picture with Sony Pictures Classics starring Julianne Moore.

In Lisa Genova’s extraordinary New York Times bestselling novel, an accomplished professor diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease learns that her worth is comprised of more than her ability to remember. Now a major motion picture from Sony Pictures Classics starring Julianne Moore, Alec Baldwin, Kate Bosworth, and Kristen Stewart.

Excerpt from Still Alice:

As she ran along the river, she became mindful of nothing but the sounds of her Nikes hitting the pavement in syncopated rhythm with the pace of her breath. She didn’t replay her argument with Lydia. She didn’t acknowledge her growling stomach. She didn’t think about John. She just ran.

As was her routine, she stopped running once she made it back to the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Park, a pocket of manicured lawns abutting Memorial Drive. Her head cleared, her body relaxed and rejuvenated, she began walking home. The JFK Park funneled into Harvard Square through a pleasant, bench-lined corridor between the Charles Hotel and the Kennedy School of Government.

At the other end of the corridor, she stood at the intersection of Eliot Street and Brattle, ready to cross, when a woman grabbed her forearm with startling force and said, “Have you thought about heaven today?”

The woman fixed Alice with a penetrating, unwavering stare. She had long hair the color and texture of a teased Brillo pad and wore a handmade placard hung over her chest that read AMERICA REPENT, TURN TO JESUS FROM SIN. There was always someone selling God in Harvard Square, but Alice had never been singled out so directly and intimately before.

“Sorry,” she said and, noticing a break in the flow of traffic, escaped to the other side of the street.

She wanted to continue walking but stood frozen instead. She didn’t know where she was. She looked back across the street. The Brillo-haired woman pursued another sinner down the corridor. The corridor, the hotel, the stores, the illogically meandering streets. She knew she was in Harvard Square, but she didn’t know which way was home.

She tried again, more specifi cally. The Harvard Square Hotel, Eastern Mountain Sports, Dickson Bros. Hardware, Mount Auburn Street. She knew all of these places—this square had been her stomping ground for over twenty-five years—but they somehow didn’t fi t into a mental map that

told her where she lived relative to them. A black-and-white circular “T” sign directly in front of her marked an entrance to the Red Line trains and buses underground, but there were three such entrances in Harvard Square, and she couldn’t piece together which one of the three this was.

Her heart began to race. She started sweating. She told herself that an accelerated heart rate and perspiration were part of an orchestrated and appropriate response to running. But as she stood on the sidewalk, it felt like panic.

She willed herself to walk another block and then another, her rubbery legs feeling like they might give way with each bewildered step. The Coop, Cardullo’s, the magazines on the corner, the Cambridge visitors’ center across the street, and Harvard Yard beyond that. She told herself she could still read and recognize. None of it helped. It all lacked a context.

People, cars, buses, and all kinds of unbearable noise rushed and wove around and past her. She closed her eyes. She listened to her own blood whoosh and pulse behind her ears.

“Please stop this,” she whispered.

She opened her eyes. Just as suddenly as it had left her, the landscape snapped snugly back into place.




Still Alice is now in theaters!!!

Alice Howland, happily married with three grown children, is a renowned linguistics professor who starts to forget words. When she receives a devastating diagnosis, Alice and her family find their bonds tested.

Read An Excerpt of Christopher's Diary: Secrets of Foxworth by V. C. Andrews!


(click on picture to buy a copy)



Excerpt:

In the words of Christopher Dollanganger, Jr. himself... 

THERE ARE TIMES NOW WHEN I THINK BACK to what our lives were like in the mid-’50s and remember it all the way you might remember a dream. Often, with dreams that are so vivid, you’re not sure how much of it was fantasy and how much of it was real. There is so much of it that I want to be true, but I’m not the kind of person who is comfortable fooling himself.

I’ve always had a lot to think about, so it’s not really so unusual for me to have decided to keep a diary. My thoughts are very important to me. This diary will be a way of keeping my history, our history, authentically. Nothing Momma has said, nothing Cathy has said, and nothing Daddy has said will be as easy to recall later on when I’m much older if I don’t remember to write down what was important as soon as I can.

I didn’t do this right away. I kept telling myself diaries were something girls kept, not boys. Then I read about some famous diaries in literature and, of course, ships’ captains’ logs, all written by men, and I thought, this is silly. There’s nothing absolutely feminine about writing your thoughts down, about capturing your feelings. I just wouldn’t do something silly like write “Dear Diary.” I’d just write everything as it happened and be as accurate as I could.

I bought this diary myself with my allowance, but I never told anyone I had, not even my father, who was interested in everything I did and thought. It seemed to me that the whole point of keeping a diary was keeping that secret until it was time to let others read it, if that was your purpose. And it would be no good if it was done cryptically so that people had to figure out what I meant here and what I meant there. That’s why I have to be as honest as I can about what I saw, what I heard, and especially what I felt.

Like Otto Frank, I think it’s important that more people know what really happened to us before and afterward. Cathy used to call us flowers in the attic, withering away. It helped her to think of us that way. But we weren’t flowers. We were young, beautiful children who trusted that those who loved us would always protect us even better than we could protect ourselves.

Besides, I can’t ever think of us in any symbolic way. We weren’t the creations of someone’s imagination. We were real flesh-and-blood children. We were locked away, not only by selfish greed but by cruel hearts that used the Bible like a club to pound out the love we carried in our innocent hearts. How that happened and what became of us is too important to just let it disappear in the dying memories of those who lived it.

Book Review: Christopher's Diary: The Secrets of Foxworth by V. C. Andrews + Giveaway


Christopher's Diary: The Secrets of Foxworth
Dollanganger #6
Author: V. C. Andrews
Reading Level: Young Adult
Genre: Gothic
Released: October 28 2014
Review Source: Pocket Books

Jealousy, tragedy, survival, and revenge—the discovery of Christopher's diary in the ruins of Foxworth Hall brings new secrets of the Dollanganger family to light and obsesses a new generation. With Flowers in the Attic and Petals on the Wind both now major Lifetime TV events, this first new addition to the Dollanganger story in nearly thirty years is a timely look at the events in the attic—from teenage Christopher's point of view.

And don't forget to preorder the follow-up, Christopher's Diary: Echoes of Dollanganger!

Christopher Dollanganger was fourteen when he and his younger siblings Cathy and the twins, Cory and Carrie, were locked away in the attic of Foxworth Hall, prisoners of their mother's greedy inheritance scheme. For three long years he kept hope alive for the sake of the others. But the shocking truth about how their ordeal affected him was always kept hidden, until now.

Seventeen-year-old Kristin Masterwood is thrilled when her father’s construction company is hired to inspect the Foxworth property for a prospective buyer. The once grand Southern mansion still sparks legends and half-truths about the four innocent Dollanganger children, even all these decades later. Foxworth holds a special fascination for Kristin, who was too young when her mother died to learn much about her distant blood tie to the notorious family.

Accompanying her dad to the forbidden territory, they find a leather-bound book, its yellowed pages filled with the neat script of Christopher Dollanganger himself. Her father grows increasingly uneasy about her reading it, but as she devours the teens story page by page, his shattering account of temptation, heartache, courage, and betrayal overtakes Kristin's every thought. And soon her obsession with the doomed boy crosses a dangerous line.


Kristin has always been harassed because it is known fact that she is a relative of the Foxworth's and there's rumors going around about what the Foxworth's did to a couple children over 50 years. Everyone tells her that she will grow into her Foxworth madness, but she isn't really sure what that madness is. Kristin's father gets a job that requires he demolish what is left of the Foxworth mansion and she tags along with him to look at what his job will require. There they find a metal box with a diary inside. Hoping this diary will have the answers to her questions Kristin becomes obsessed with reading the words of Christopher Dollanganger, one of the four children that was supposedly locked away in the attic of Foxworth.

This book wasn't quite what I was expecting it to be. I wanted more of Christopher's story, more of his feelings, than I got. It was more so about how his story helped Kristin deal with certain situations in her life. This isn't to say the book wasn't good, it did make me want to reread Flowers In The Attic but it wasn't exactly what I had hoped. While reading this book I must say Kristin reacted to Christopher's diary the exact same way I reacted to Flowers In The Attic. With the sense of this is so wrong and not something that I should be reading or enjoying, but I can't put it down. So it was nice to see that Kristin was reacting the same way, of course she was reacting as a relative of the children rather than a by-stander like I am. I found myself always wanting to learn more about Kristin as the story went on, whenever she would read and take me away from her story I would become aggravated because she was growing as a character before my eyes but she wanted to know what Christopher had done next. Since I already knew what had happened in the attic I wanted to know what would happen in the present day with her. But it was also nice to see that she connected with the Dollanganger children, that she used their stories to help better her life in the best way that she could. She felt for the children losing their childhood by being locked in the attic, so she went out and lived her life but always came back to the diary. Now that I know what to expect of the Christopher's Diary books I am really looking forward to the next one.




Giveaway:
Open to U.S Only

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Book Revisited: Petals On The Wind & If There Be Thorns by V. C. Andrews


Petals On The Wind
Dollanganger #2
Author: V. C. Andrews
Reading Level: Young Adult
Genre: Gothic | Family Saga | Classic
Released: May 20th 2014 (Gallery Books Media Tie-In)
Review Source: Gallery Books


On the heels of the successful Lifetime TV version of Flowers in the Attic comes the TV movie tie-in edition of Petals On the Wind, the second book in the captivating Dollanganger saga.

Forbidden love comes into full bloom. For three years they were kept hidden in the eaves of Foxworth Hall, their existence all but denied by a mother who schemed to inherit a fortune. For three years their fate was in the hands of their righteous, merciless grandmother. They had to stay strong…but in their hopeless world, Cathy and her brother Christopher discovered blossoming desires that tumbled into a powerful obsession. Now, with their frail sister, Carrie, they have broken free and scraped enough together for three bus tickets and a chance at a new life. The horrors of the attic are behind them…but they will carry its legacy of dark secrets forever.


Cathy, Carrie and Chris have escaped their insanely inhuman grandmother, and they are living with some emotional scars. After finding a nice man to take them in as children the story flashes to a couple years later, showing their success but that doesn't mean that Cathy has forgotten what their mother and grandmother has done to them. Cathy wants to get revenge on them both while Chris is dealing with the feelings that came to him while trapped in the attic and Carrie is dealing with learning to be a real child.

This book is just as good as Flowers In The Attic was, if not a little better. I find this story so interesting-I know it's morbid that I love these books so much but the story and the characters are both appealing, in odd ways. The story dynamic is different now because they have escaped from the attic and now can actually start living their life, but they are held back by the three or more years that they were trapped-unable to be real children living the lives they would've had. The confrontations that happen within this book are so much more morbid and sad than what happened in Flowers In The Attic, which is why I love Petals On The Wind so much.

It's so shocking that this series was first published in the 80's because it is such a versatile story, there isn't anything that really dates the story making it able to be a modern tale unless you'd like to imagine it happening in the 80's. I think that if you haven't read this book you really should-you will feel guilty about your feelings on who Chris and Cathy should end up with but that's what makes this writing so good. V. C. Andrews knows how to play with her audience and make them feel guilty while making them know that they shouldn't feel guilty for something that will inevitably happen. And this is why I give the book 5 trees and hope that you will too!



If There Be Thorns
Dollanganger #3
Author: V. C. Andrews
Reading Level: Young Adult
Genre: Gothic | Family Saga | Classic
Released: November 28th 1981
Review Source: Pocket

Out of the ashes of evil Chris and Cathy made such a loving home for their splendid children...

Fourteen-year-old Jory was so handsome, so gentle. And Bart had such a dazzling imagination for a nine year old.

Then the lights came on in the abandoned house next door. Soon the Old Lady in Black was there, watching their home with prying eyes, guarded by her strange old butler. Soon the shrouded woman had Bart over for cookies and ice cream and asked him to call her "Grandmother."

And soon Bart's transformation began...

A transformation that sprang from "the book of secrets" the gaunt old butler had given him... a transformation fed by the hint of terrible things about his mother and father... a transformation that led him into shocking acts of violence, self-destruction and perversity.

And now while this little boy trembles on the edge of madness, his anguished parents, his helpless brother, an obsessed old woman and the vengeful, powerful butler await the climax to a horror that flowered in an attic long ago, a horror whose thorns are still wet with blood, still tipped with fire...


Chris and Cathy are all grown up now and have children of their own. This story follows the children: Jory and Bart, and their story to find the truths and trying to live their life knowing that something within their family isn't right. While growing up Bart becomes more and more sadistic, which reminds Chris and Cathy a little too much like an unloving grandfather that they had when they were trapped in their attic.

This book falls short from the previous books, and I think this is because Chris and Cathy have finally given into their love for one another and the story changes perspectives-from Cathy to the children. It's understandable that we need to have their perspective on things while they're happening, especially Bart's perspective, but I would've rather had Cathy tell me this story. This could also be a fault of my own, I got so use to Cathy telling this story that I just didn't want to have anyone else tell the story. The story was still well written, and when knowing what Jory was up to you still get a sense of Cathy because Jory is so much like Cathy when she was a child, he just isn't haunted by being locked away in an attack for most of his childhood. But Bart was so brash and different from any of the other characters that while his story was interesting it wasn't what I was prepared to read.

If you've read Flowers In The Attic and Petals On The Wind it only makes sense to read If There Be Thorns, but if you are just picking this one up just to read for fun you may want to pass it up.





Stay tuned to OUaT, as we will feature more reviews and news about the classic Dollanganger series and its famous characters. You can read Yara's review of Flowers In The Attic (book 1 in the Dollanganger series) HERE. Next review to come, will be of Christopher's Diary: Secrets of Foxworth from Pocket Books.

“No doubt that there are very few readers out there who do not remember where this all began. TheDollanganger books by the incomparable V.C. Andrews are held in the memory of millions of readers. She presented, by far, some of the very best in YA fiction: dark, creepy, that had you on the edge of your seat just waiting for the next one to come out…Taking place in the here and now, teenager Kristin Masterwood has lost her mother, who just so happened to have been a distant relative of Malcolm Foxworth…Kristin finds a leather-bound book left behind by Christopher Dollanganger…she brings ‘Flowers in the Attic’ back to life. With one more still to come in this ‘journey back to Foxworth,’ this tale is a true escape with moments that bring the past alive and combine it with a frightening present that would make V.C. Andrews extremely proud.” —Suspense Magazine

One of the most popular authors of all time, V.C. Andrews® has been a bestselling phenomenon since the publication of Flowers in the Attic, first in the renowned Dollanganger family saga. 


 

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