Spectacle by Jodie Lynn Zdrok had me devouring the entire book. All I wanted to do was keep reading and be ensnared in the twisty roads of 19th century Paris. Nathalie and Christophe have my heart, and they are so cute together. Still, the author had to throw one little bump into that romantic endeavor (if you want to find out you have to read it). Now I am hoping something happens, so they get together in the second book (yes, I am shameless and have no heart because for it to repeat someone else has to get hurt).
The characters had me enthralled from the moment I met them, and I would love nothing more than to delve into that world over and over again. I also loved how it stayed true to the theme of death and questioning what a person wants to sacrifice to continue going through life. (You can all relax I am not going to go all English students on you and give a very detailed analysis of what the book could be about. Although, this book would be perfect for English classes).
I am so happy that both Spectacle and Sensational were on the read now list on NetGalley and that I got both copies to read because I would probably cry otherwise.
I will try to stop babbling, and you go read these books so I can go read the second one. Deal?
5 out of 5 stars.
30-year-old girl addicted to reading and writing. I review books for free, so if anyone wants a review of a book or book adaptation into a movie or tv series, feel free to contact me at bookgirl.reviews.books@gmail.com. Meet you in a thousand lives, book angels.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Xmas Break by J E Rowney
I received a copy of Xmas Break: A Christmas Thriller by J E Rowney in exchange for a honest review. I feel like the best way to put this ...
-
I have wanted to read this book since it first came out and it did not disappoint. It was not like a wow book, but for what it was it met ...
-
Rift by Andrea Cremer is an absolute delight. I found myself turning pages and being annoyed when I had to stop reading it. I fell in love...
-
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley is one of those books where I could see the appeal if it was the 1800's, but now there are so many things...
No comments:
Post a Comment