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Laddar... Freefallav Jessica Barry
Books Read in 2019 (1,585) Female Protagonist (924) Best Survival Stories (122) » 1 till Interpersonal Novels (67) Laddar...
Gå med i LibraryThing för att få reda på om du skulle tycka om den här boken. Det finns inga diskussioner på LibraryThing om den här boken. I have an eARC of the book, but I listened to the audio version (mostly at work) since I love listening to thrillers. As a thriller did I find the book lacking the extra punch to really make me love the story. Then again, I do read (and listen) to A LOT of thrillers so sometimes it feels like most books nowadays are kind of middle ground books for me. In other words, it's hard to surprise me. However, I did find this book enjoyable. I liked how you got to know more about Allison through flashbacks, why she is estranged from her mother and how she ended up on the plan. I also quite enjoyed her mother's hunt for the truth about what happened to her daughter. What I found a bit of a let down was the ending. Was I surprised? Not at all, it felt like a bit of a cliche, to be honest. So, I would say that this book will appeal to those that can really take to the story, who doesn't feel the plot to be a bit predictable. The writing is good and the narrator did a great job. The story was definitely OK. Would I read more from the author? Yes, I would. I found the book held my interested straight through and if the story had just been a bit more twisty would it have been fabulous. This was the book read for our latest book club meeting. It was not one of our top choices and it is certainly not something I’d recommend to other readers or book clubs. Allison Carpenter survives a plane crash in the Colorado Rockies. The plane was piloted by Ben Gardner, her fiancé, but he dies in the accident. Instead of waiting for rescue, Allison decides she must run because she is certain someone nefarious will be looking for her. By the time authorities find the wreckage, fire has consumed it. Though only the pilot’s body is found, authorities are convinced that Allison died. In Owl’s Creek, Maine, Maggie is devastated by the news of her daughter’s death. They had been estranged for the last two years and Maggie didn’t even know about Allison’s engagement to a wealthy pharmaceutical executive. She has difficulty accepting her daughter’s death and begins researching her daughter’s life to learn as much as she can about her past two years. The novel is a quick read. Short chapters alternate between Maggie and Allison. The reader follows Allison’s struggle to survive during which she flashes back to her life over the last two years. Conveniently, these flashbacks are in chronological order! Maggie’s chapters show her actions after learning about her daughter’s fate; she too has flashbacks, mostly focused on the reasons for the estrangement. There are also a few brief sections from the point of view of the man who is pursuing Allison. Though he is known only as The Man, he has almost superhuman abilities. He knows exactly where to find the plane wreckage before authorities locate it and has no difficulty following Allison. He even knows when someone assists her. And The Man’s behaviour is not the only thing that is unbelievable. Allison’s survival is almost miraculous. For example, she is supposedly injured quite badly with a gash on her left leg that goes “down to the bone,” yet she runs all night before applying rubbing alcohol to it? Then there are the other illogical actions. If you want to talk to someone, is the most logical option to simply hang around that person’s former workplace? A person is killed in a motel room where the body would easily be found and there are no consequences? The plot is shallow and full of predictable twists. For instance, the first page includes such a description that gives such an obvious clue that the appearance of a person towards the end is not in the least unexpected. Allison’s predicament didn’t arouse my sympathy. She just strikes me as vain and shallow. She falls in love with Ben because he is handsome and rich. Despite what her mother thinks, Allison seems to have few principles; those she has, she dispenses with to become Ben’s arm candy. She lets herself be manipulated in such obvious ways. I understand that the journey she undertakes is also a journey to find herself once again, but we are supposed to believe she lost herself so quickly? Does she really believe she might be able to land a plane because she has seen Ben do it so often?! There are elements that particularly irritated me. Why, for instance, is everyone’s perfume or cologne described: “There was a smell coming off him, something musky and citrusy” and “I could smell hair spray mixed with perfume. Shalimar” and “the faint traces of her perfume, bergamot and vanilla” and “that aftershave of his, a spicy musk undercut with the sharpness of citrus”? What’s with the repetition that older people don’t understand technology: “Most of my friends didn’t understand how the internet worked and only the most savvy had Facebook accounts”? I dislike when novels rely on portraying police or other authorities as incompetent. When Maggie is told that the coroner has declared Allison dead, she thinks, “It felt negligent to me, and reckless. How could they declare my daughter dead without a single scrap of evidence?” Exactly! This would not happen. And the author doesn't know that DNA analysis is used to identify bodies? The novel does have some depth in its exploration of a mother-daughter relationship and society’s expectations of females, but this is not sufficient to raise the quality of the novel for me. There are just too many plot holes and too little verisimilitude. Note: Please check out my reader's blog (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/) and follow me on Twitter (@DCYakabuski). This starts off with a bang! Ally has just survived a plane crash in the remote Colorado Rockies, and has to scramble to gather up what she can from the wreckage. But where you’re assuming she’ll be hoping for the search plane to find her, you quickly discover that in fact, she’s trying to get as far away from the crash site as possible before they come. The dual perspective, her mother, gets a knock at the door, and is told her daughter’s plane has gone down. This quickly becomes a back and forth between mother and daughter as both examine their fractured relationship, Allison slowly revealing through flashbacks how she managed to make a mess of her life and discover something terrible going on that she had to try to stop, and her mother uncovering clues as she struggles to survive the Colorado wilderness. A fun escape read. Please excuse typos/name misspellings. Entered on screen reader. inga recensioner | lägg till en recension
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Google Books — Laddar... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyKlassifikation enligt LCBetygMedelbetyg:
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As a thriller did I find the book lacking the extra punch to really make me love the story. Then again, I do read (and listen) to A LOT of thrillers so sometimes it feels like most books nowadays are kind of middle ground books for me. In other words, it's hard to surprise me. However, I did find this book enjoyable. I liked how you got to know more about Allison through flashbacks, why she is estranged from her mother and how she ended up on the plan. I also quite enjoyed her mother's hunt for the truth about what happened to her daughter. What I found a bit of a let down was the ending. Was I surprised? Not at all, it felt like a bit of a cliche, to be honest.
So, I would say that this book will appeal to those that can really take to the story, who doesn't feel the plot to be a bit predictable. The writing is good and the narrator did a great job. The story was definitely OK. Would I read more from the author? Yes, I would. I found the book held my interested straight through and if the story had just been a bit more twisty would it have been fabulous. ( )