It Was Something She Would Never Ever Forget Again Nora Roberts

Title: The Obsession
Spring Book Review Button Author: Nora Roberts
ISBN: 9780399175169
No. of Pages: 464
Genre: Romantic Thriller
Origins: Berkley/NAL
Release Date: 12 April 2016

Synopsis:

"Naomi Bowes lost her innocence the nighttime she followed her father into the woods. In freeing the daughter trapped in the root cellar, Naomi revealed the horrible extent of her father's crimes and fabricated him infamous. No matter how close she gets to happiness, she tin't outrun the sins of Thomas David Bowes.

Now a successful lensman living under the name Naomi Carson, she has plant a place that calls to her, a rambling sometime house in need of repair, thousands of miles away from everything she's ever known. Naomi wants to cover the solitude, but the kindly residents of Sunrise Cove keep forcing her to open up—especially the determined Xander Keaton.

Naomi can experience her defenses failing, and knows that the connexion her new life offers is something she'due south ever secretly craved. But the sins of her father tin go an obsession, and, as she'southward learned fourth dimension and once again, her past is never more than than a nightmare away."

My Thoughts: I know I take a potent bias for Nora Roberts. (Nora, not Nora as  J.D. Robb. She writes plenty novels as Nora that I do non need to add together her Robb canon to my list.) Bias may not exist the right word. Obsession is more like information technology. Nora is the merely author whose books I volition purchase without even looking at the synopsis. If I hear she is publishing a new book, I immediately preorder information technology. Even though some are ameliorate than others, I accept never been let down by any of her novels. I have my favorites, every bit does anyone with a favorite writer, but I could read whatsoever one of her novels over and over again without getting bored. Her descriptions of places and things are a thing of perfection, and her suspense (and romance) never fails to exit me incoherent. Even so, it is in her portrayal of people and animals and their relationships, specially dogs, where she really melts my butter.

The Obsession has everything I love about Nora's novels and nothing that I do non. It has stunning scenery, a woman who is a flake lost but still fiercely contained, relationships built not only on mutual allure simply respect, danger and darkness, witty simply natural dialogue and a canis familiaris. Oh, that canis familiaris. Forget Xander; I am in beloved with the dog. Nora knows her dogs, and information technology shows in everything she writes about Tag. There are passages within the novel specifically well-nigh the canis familiaris that not just fabricated me laugh out loud merely required me to read them aloud to my husband because they captured the goofiness of dogs so perfectly. Cats are lovely animals, and I know they make great pets. All the same, as Nora knows and shows with Tag, there is nil quite similar the unabashed joy and unashamed unconditional beloved that a dog has and brings to any home.

As always, Nora never skimps on details as she sets the phase and creates her character. Naomi is a lensman, a successful one, and you could view the number of pages devoted to light and focus and perspective as a daunting task to overcome. In true Nora fashion though, she makes it entertaining likewise as educational. It is almost spellbinding to see how Naomi will imagine a photo and use various techniques to bring that image to lite. Naomi is also in the middle of major renovations, which ways description upon clarification of designs and materials and article of furniture and other dwelling construction goodies. Equally with the photography, you could easily get bored with the many renovation discussions. Even so, I see it as insight into worlds I take never considered inbound. I am not a lensman and never will be, yet through the bits and pieces I have learned from Naomi, I volition accept a new approach to certain pictures I take. The same goes for renovations. I can now appreciate the fine details that go into building and customizing a home, for information technology is the details which bear witness an owner'south individuality and a home has to show its owner's quirks. Some may find it boring, but I find Naomi's focus on her profession and on her home to be endearing and part of her charm.

As for the mystery, information technology could be a bit amend. I actually figured information technology out, which is never a good thing. That beingness said, I did not figure it out until the latter one-half of the book. More importantly, I do non listen that I had figured it out. I am okay with knowing whodunnit considering I was also decorated enjoying Naomi and Xander and Tag. They are the kind of characters with whom you instinctively feel condolement and camaraderie, and watching their courtship is a delight. The mystery throws an added layer to their story, and the whodunnit is less important than how they handle that knowledge themselves. That they do then with backbone and realism makes me comfortable knowing so far in accelerate.

At that place are many who would consider Nora a guilty pleasure. I will never consider Nora a guilty pleasure. Her books are pure pleasure for me and always brand me feel better. They are the chocolate and the peanut butter, the rainbow on a sunny 24-hour interval, the ice cream in a root beet float. I consider The Obsession to be one of her strongest novels in the last few years and immediately wanted to read information technology again upon finishing because I enjoyed everything virtually it. Plus, Tag and the Pants of Humiliation volition forever hold a special place in my heart.

The Obsession by Nora Roberts

BOTTOM LINE: Nora is my queen, and The Obsession is just one of the many reasons why I will read anything she writes.

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Source: https://www.thatswhatsheread.net/2016/04/book-review-the-obsession-by-nora-roberts/

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