Publisher: William Morrow

The Kindest Lie

December 6, 2023 Whitney Review 0 Comments
The Kindest Lie

Reviews Done Quick The Kindest Lie centers around Ruth. After many years she is returning home for the holidays. However, something else draws her home. Ruth had a baby in high school, and now in her thirties, she feels pulled to find him. The Kindest Lie while a good holiday read, was a little predictable […]

Divider

Friday Meme: The Kindest Lie

Friday Meme: The Kindest Lie

Hosted by Rose City Reader Beginning: No one talked about what happened in the summer of 1997 in the house where Ruth Tuttle had grown up. Hosted by Freda’s Voice Page 56 She would go home and confront Mama.  She would get answers about her son. The Book: Save Subscribe to Blog via Email Enter […]

Divider

TBR Thursday The Kindest Lie

TBR Thursday The Kindest Lie

My tbr is getting out of control. It is time to take action and remind myself of all those goodies on my shelf.  To get motivated I started a meme, To Be Read Thursday.  Each week, I will highlight one book that I physically own, be it arc, bought, paperback or ebook, and is on […]

Divider

What the Dead Know

May 16, 2023 Whitney Review 0 Comments
What the Dead Know

I originally picked up What the Dead Know because of my love for unsolved mysteries and the Anastasiaesque theme of the novel. Instead, Shawn Colvin’s Sunny Came Home came to mind. Let me explain. Sunny and Heather Bethany disappeared and thirty years later Heather reemerges, coming home so to speak. Like Anna Anderson I called […]

Divider

To Be Read Vote July 2022

To Be Read Vote July 2022

My To Be Read List is a monthly meme hosted by Michelle at Because Reading. How It Works Each month you will make a post with three books from your TBR List (these books can be already on your kindle or shelf or books you might want to purchase) and add your link on the […]

Divider

I’d Know You Anywhere by Laura Lippman

November 25, 2011 Whitney Review 4 Comments
I’d Know You Anywhere by Laura Lippman

I’d Know You Anywhere is a chilling tale I could not turn away from.  It was disturbing and vulnerable all at once — I didn’t realize that could be possible.  The characters are well developed with their personality traits invoking the proper emotion appropriate for the  subject matter at hand, bring the novel to life. […]

Divider