kasperjin

Karim Ouchhib Ouchhib itibaren Viala-du-Pas-de-Jaux, Fransa itibaren Viala-du-Pas-de-Jaux, Fransa

Okuyucu Karim Ouchhib Ouchhib itibaren Viala-du-Pas-de-Jaux, Fransa

Karim Ouchhib Ouchhib itibaren Viala-du-Pas-de-Jaux, Fransa

kasperjin

I liked it but I didnt get the full of it because it was so short.

kasperjin

I'd like to give this 3.5 stars. No, 3.75 stars. I liked it, but I think I kept expecting it to be something it wasn't and I never did really connect to the main characters, and in fact spent the first 95 percent of the book disliking Olivia. I listened to The Beach House as an audio book, and while the narration was good (it said it was narrated by the author), for some reason, I think I would have liked it better if I had read it myself. Book in hand. My reading chair. Soda and chocolate. The Beach House is a coming home, finding your lost self kind of story. Cara left home at 18 after her controlling father beat her and her mother, Olivia, stood by and let him do it. As if she could have stopped him, but Cara thinks she should have tried. Cara's brother is turning out like their father, and her mother is dying from cancer. I know people dying from cancer happens, but I basically rolled my eyes when that's what Olivia was dying from. It's so insensitive of me to say cancer is cliche...but it is, and that kind of set me against liking the book for a few hours (that's about 6-8 chapters). So I'm a grudge holder. Now you know. The turtles kind of annoyed me too, especially the factoids at the beginning of the chapters (not so much that they were there, but that they seemed arbitrary and unrelated to the text to follow). Anyway, basically what happens is Cara goes home for the summer, makes up with her mom before she dies, and hooks up with an old high school acquaintance. Very common themes in contemporary fiction, so nothing new there. But Mary's voice was fresh and clear and enjoyed the story overall.