Heartbreaking, stunning, gripping. Such an unlikely coupling, but believable in the midst of this beautiful tragedy.
Powerful read
Review from All the Ugly and Wonderful Things →
Heartbreaking, stunning, gripping. Such an unlikely coupling, but believable in the midst of this beautiful tragedy.
Everything about the story makes you question yourself and your morality. But yet you still root for Wavy.
Plain and simple. Byrn Greenwood speaks openly about her “passionate love affair” with a “much older man” when she was 13 and adamantly defends it, saying she was capable of consent. The relationship between Wavy and Kellenhas sexual undertones almost immediately after they first meet, when she is EIGHT years old and he is a..
This is one of the best books I’ve read this year. While fiction it is based on real events. In a short while I became attached to the characters and the end left me in tears, and it made me want to learn more about the real history of the events and not the BS..
I kept reading because I wanted to find out how it ended. I found the overall story intriguing but felt it took too long to get through some of the chapters. Like it could’ve come to a conclusion sooner. It would’ve made more sense to me for it to develop as it happened rather than..
This story was one of surprising revelations and kept me wanting to read more. A great love story of romance, family and friendship.
Gut wrenching, heartbreaking, torturous but ultimately uplifting. A harrowing tale of life in captivity. Incredible story of Amanda Berry.
Bryn Greenwood’s novel is slightly creep and definitely addicted. I couldn’t put it down, Wavy’s relationships and her upbringing keeps you on edge until the very last word.
what a wild ride. yes, some ppl won’t be able to see past the kid/adult relationship but I tend to think those are the ppl who live in a tidy little buddle of a life where there’s only good and bad… no grey area. this book requires you to get into the grey area and..
