I actually found this on the library shelf as well. I actually really like Heitzman as an author. Her characters are always so realistic with real doubts and fears. She does not allow there to be an easy answer to really complicated situations.
This book is about a rising star actress that falls and gets amnesia at the beginning of the book. She finally remembers who she is but not many of the details of the fall. It is a mystery. She meets a local that helps save her uncle and eventually falls in love with this woman. Her fame adds some difficulty to the relationship. The book does have a few unexpected turns as they struggle with getting to know each other and find the "killer" and the motive.
I liked this book. Not quite the perfect mystery, but enough to make it interesting.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Lost Highways by Curtiss Ann Matlock
I was in the mood for an easy romantic type book. I grabbed this off the library shelf. It looked good without too much of the "porn" descriptions that can be in romance books. I steer clear of books with the covers of half clothed men about to kiss the woman. I really got sucked into these in high school - don't want to go there again.
Anyway, this book was not amazing and possibly forgetable. The characters were both lost - not sure of where they belonged and essentially found each other at this crossroad. The female character was a wandering barrel racer trying to get rid of the pain of losing her mother and the male character was a doctor trying to find his way away from his domineering family of doctors. It was an interesting book to see hearts healed from past hurts by the love of a stranger. Matlock did a good job of portraying family dysfunctions and how they play into our struggle to find one self.
I would read one of her books again.
Anyway, this book was not amazing and possibly forgetable. The characters were both lost - not sure of where they belonged and essentially found each other at this crossroad. The female character was a wandering barrel racer trying to get rid of the pain of losing her mother and the male character was a doctor trying to find his way away from his domineering family of doctors. It was an interesting book to see hearts healed from past hurts by the love of a stranger. Matlock did a good job of portraying family dysfunctions and how they play into our struggle to find one self.
I would read one of her books again.
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