Saturday, April 18, 2015

Never Smile at Strangers (Grand Trespass #1) By Jennifer Jaynes Review

When nineteen-year-old Tiffany Perron vanishes without a trace, the residents of rural Grand Trespass, Louisiana, launch a desperate search to find her. But few clues are unearthed, and before long another young woman disappears.
As locals continue to vanish, residents begin to discover that they might not know those closest to them as well as they had thought. Lies and insecurities quickly surface, leading everyone to question one another…and their involvement in the disappearances.
Meanwhile, an unstable, twisted killer is hiding quietly in their midst. Ever since his mother’s murder four years earlier, he’s been forced to raise his disturbed teenage sister. He’s terrified of her—and of women in general—and his world revolves around his fear of and obsession over them.




Review: This book was twisted on so many levels I am not sure where to go with this review. I was really bothered with some of the subject matter not knowing exactly who the target age group is. The incense I was not liking even though the author did handle it with class. I was also turned off with all the smoking in the book. If is personal thing for me and I find it not cool in movies and also a turn off in books as well. I did like the plot idea however. I loved those twist and turns and I had fun trying to figure out who the killer was and at the end I was like oh I so did not see that. So Jaynes gets a lot of points for that but as I said this is one book that is twisted on many levels and some people may not like that.

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