Suzanne Jenkins (1)
Autor de Pam of Babylon
Para otros autores llamados Suzanne Jenkins, ver la página de desambiguación.
Series
Obras de Suzanne Jenkins
Holiday Hunks - Joey's Christmas Miracle (Hot Hunks Steamy Romance Collection Book 6) (2019) 5 copias
Pam's Adventures in Babylon 5 copias
Bayou Cottage 3 copias
Julie Hsu 2 copias
Beach Bodies 2 copias
The Pam of Babylon Boxed Set 2 copias
Bayou Baby (Cypress Cove, #4) 1 copia
My Christmas Romance 1 copia
Friends to Lovers 1 copia
It Ain't Me Babe 1 copia
Memory of the Color Yellow 1 copia
Bittersweets (8 Book Series) 1 copia
Sweet and Sassy Cinderella 1 copia
Memory of the Color Yellow #21 1 copia
Memory of the Color Yellow 16-20 1 copia
We're Just Friends 1 copia
Memory of the Color Yellow 6-10 1 copia
A Greektown Wedding 1 copia
Sexual Healing 1 copia
Mixed: Short Story 1 copia
Memory of the Color Yellow 11-15 1 copia
Obras relacionadas
Fire & Ice: A Limited-Edition Collection of Paranormal & Fantasy Romances (2019) — Contribuidor — 4 copias
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
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Miembros
Reseñas
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Autores relacionados
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 102
- También por
- 5
- Miembros
- 695
- Popularidad
- #36,412
- Valoración
- 3.7
- Reseñas
- 49
- ISBNs
- 25
The blurb for this book made it sound like it was going to be all about a surgeon with a severe psychological issue, and how she interacted (or didn’t) with the outside world. The first half was great–it was dark, and scary, and heart rending; when she told her story in graphic and disturbing flashbacks of how she was abused as a child, I shook my head in disbelief. It was all downhill from there.
The fictitious surgeon in the novel is torn apart when her illegitimate baby is taken from her one day. The rest of her life is spent thinking about her and wanting to find her, but afraid to because of a threat her mother made to her. After her mother dies, she goes back to her native Louisiana and tries to find closure.
From that point on, the book deteriorated into an obsession with children and a hard to believe personality change. In the beginning, this woman didn’t speak to anyone and was unable to dress herself or interact normally…she had assistants take care of things for her. She was driven to the hospital by a car service, did surgery like an automaton, and then spent her free time jogging on the streets of NYC to keep her demons at bay. After she returned to her native state of Louisiana, and certain events occurred (can’t tell you without spoilers), she essentially became a normal person. Very hard to believe. Major personality disorders don’t just spontaneously resolve.
The story then takes on a ridiculous twist, and the ending is abrupt and eye-rollingly impossible. Well, I suppose it’s possible, but highly unlikely in the real world.
Suzanne Jenkins touts the book’s ending as something that will galvanize the reader, either it will make you think, or not. Personally, I thought the book could have been shorter, especially all the stuff that took place after her mother died, and I was highly unsatisfied how the character of the surgeon changed from an unstable and fascinating person to a boring, seemingly “cured” normal functioning woman. It seemed as if there were two books with different people melded together. The premise was so brilliant, and the story was such a waste once the plot took that turn for the worst. I really wanted to like this book. I actually almost loved it up until Alexandra returned to Louisiana. At that point, the book’s personality changed, just like the surgeon’s did.
You can get the book here! Please, tell me what you think. And if you haven’t done it already, download the Kindle reading app.
… (más)