Series: standalone
Published by Lake Union Publishing on May 7th 2019
Genres: Fiction, Mystery
Pages: 279
Format: Kindle Edition
Source: Publisher
Buy on Amazon
Rating:
I received this book for free from Publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.
It was to be the perfect wedding—until the bride disappeared.
Annie Taft’s wedding is four days away, and it will be one of the grandest anyone can remember in her small South Carolina town. Preparations are in order. Friends and family are gathering in anticipation. Everything is going according to plan. Except that Annie herself has vanished. Did she have second thoughts?
Or has something much worse happened to the bride-to-be?
As the days pass, the list of suspects in her disappearance grows. Could it be the recently released man a young Annie misidentified as her mother’s killer? Could it be someone even closer to her?
While her loved ones frantically try to track her down, they’re forced to grapple with their own secrets—secrets with the power to reframe entire relationships, leaving each to wonder how well they really knew Annie and how well they know themselves.
Annie’s wedding is only four days away and it’s a big event for the small town. Such a big event that the local reporter Laurel is doing her best to try and get the scoop. The wedding isn’t the only big event that happens. Annie is contacted by a lawyer about the man that went to prison for her mother’s murder, one that after all these years might be innocent and is serving a sentence he wasn’t meant to. Now Annie is missing, and her friends and family are trying to find her. While the search for Annie is moved into actions, the characters must come to terms with their own regrets and what it means to finally let them go.
I enjoyed this story. I thought it was a fast read. I loved the last book by Marybeth Mayhew Whalen. So while I enjoyed it, I didn’t love it, but I didn’t hate it either. I thought it was a good, quick read. That being said. The book is classified as a thriller on goodreads and I don’t believe that this is a thriller but more of a general fiction.
The story mostly follows Clary, Annie’s cousin. Faye her aunt who raised her. Kenney, a kid that admired Annie since school and Laurel a reporter. It follows their lives as this situation unfolds and how they deal with Annie’s disappears as well as some major milestones in their lives.
I really wanted more character development. I think this had a lot more potential that it just did not seem to reach. While I liked the premise and the characters, I just really wanted more.
I was confused about how a town that took the testimony of a three-year-old and jailed an innocent man. She was three… How does that even happen?
Also, the revelation, in the end, felt completely out of the blue and perhaps added for shock value?
But I saw what the author mostly wanted to do with this. I appreciated that. I thought some of it was really sad and emotional and I do enjoy her writing. Overall, I am looking forward to see what she does next.
Cute new look for your blog Lily! Glad that even though you had issues with this you are still willing to pick up something else from this author.
Hmm, if it said thriller that’s what it should deliver. Glad you enjoyed it though.
Uhh taking the word of a 3 year old, seriously? I mean, why not more investigation or something? Sucks that this wasn’t really a thriller. They should change the genre for sure.
Sad they didn’t make a sound case for the conviction. I would think they would need more.
It sounds like an interesting set-up for a story, but too bad there wasn’t as much development as you would’ve liked. That part about the testimony of a three year old jailing an innocent man sounds a bit weird. I am not a fan when twists are added for shock value only and don’t make sense. That’s nice you still enjoyed part of it and that it was a fast read.
It really makes a difference if you expect a thriller and its not really. They based his sentence on a three year old’s testimony? Yeah, can’t quite buy that one. Glad it was like-able for you.
A three-year-old’s testimony? My niece says yes to everything, she would be an awful witness!
For all it’s fault, I want to read this! Great review!
Bummer this wasn’t as much of a thriller as you’d hoped. And believing a three year old’s testimony does sound off. LOL
-Lauren
I like the new header! Cute