Save Me Lisa Scottoline 9780312380786 Books
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Save Me Lisa Scottoline 9780312380786 Books
First, I love Lisa Scottoline - her Sunday column are the best of homespun humor - her legal books are wonderful but she missed something in this book, the characters were not well defined. I felt lost about the husband's role, also her friend popping in and out didn't make a lot of sense. She went off about a happening in her earlier life that i can understand contributed to her feelings about the fire, but really just confused the issue. Not her best work by far, but that doesn't mean that i won't still buy her next book as I have all her past books. She just needs to get off the bandstand of troubled men and women and get back to her legal mysteries with characters we know and love.Tags : Save Me [Lisa Scottoline] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. <DIV><DIV><I>From the </I>New York Times <I>bestselling author of </I>Think Twice <I>and </I>Look Again <I>comes an emotionally powerful novel about a split-second choice,Lisa Scottoline,Save Me,St. Martin's Press,031238078X,FIC031000,Thrillers - General,Bullying in schools;Fiction.,Motherhood;Fiction.,Mothers and daughters;Fiction.,AMERICAN MYSTERY & SUSPENSE FICTION,Bullying in schools,Contemporary Women,Fiction,Fiction - Espionage Thriller,Fiction Thrillers General,Fiction-Thriller,GENERAL,General Adult,Motherhood,Mothers and daughters,SCOTTOLINE, LISA - PROSE & CRITICISM,Thrillers,United States
Save Me Lisa Scottoline 9780312380786 Books Reviews
I wish someone could have saved me from reading this book. My only defense is that I have enjoyed Ms. Scattoline's previous works of fiction so much I felt obligated to stick with this tripe until the end.
One interesting fact I now know what chirped the car means. She must have used it a few hundred times throughout the novel.
I found the book to be bland to the point of aud nauseum until page 160 to be precise. Then things started to pick up when some lawyers entered the plot. Unfortunately this was a short lived respite.
To sum it up quickly there is a mother named Rose and her daughter Melly who has a large birthmark who is teased at school. There is an explosion and Rose is blamed for not saving one of the bullies and rescuing her own daughter instead. She plays the role of victim for most of the story as she is consumed with guilt. Add to the mix a cookie cutter portrait of a husband who we never get to know and characters we don't give a fig about.
Normally I would feel so bad for a child who is teased and left out of schools typical cliques but this child seemed extremely immature and needy to the point I wanted to tell her to shut up and read another Harry Potter book. Only her mother annoyed me more.
There is actually an interesting subplot in this heinous excuse for a book that details an event in Roses past where she once (spoiler alert!) ran over a little boy who raced in front of her car as a teenager, and she has carried the burden of this guilt with her all her life. THIS was very believable. I just wish the rest of the book was.
In the last third of this novel Rose suddenly dons invisible superwoman clothes and discovers (spoiler alert!) hidden far fetched and totally unbelievable conspiracies involving sending peanuts to foreign countries so their children would die of peanut allergies-a crooked politician involved in murder and the peanuts, and the list goes on.
Superhero Rose dyes her hair and dons disguises. A metamorphism that no one in their right mind would believe.
What we have here is a very boring and tedious book that seems to go on forever and then an absurd ending tacked on which I still find hard to believe Ms. Scattoline wrote, yet I know in my heart of hearts she did.
Since this book I have read a few terrific books by her so do NOT use this novel as a template for the authors talent. We all have a clinker now and then. Being a writer I know this too well.
Read her last three novels and you will be happily surprised. Skip this one by all means. And to all a good night.
When Rose McKenna and her family move to a small Pennsylvania town, they are hoping for a more supportive environment. But this has not turned out to be the case, and the bullying that traumatized young Melly in previous settings has followed them to this small, peaceful town; for Melly has a large birthmark on her cheek, and suffers regular taunts and teasing.
Volunteering at the school in the lunch room offers Rose the opportunity to oversee things and to provide a safety net, of sorts. But on one tragic day, the cafeteria explodes, endangering lives. Rose's efforts to direct the children outdoors to safety, and then return to find her daughter trapped in the bathroom, leads to applause for the "hero mom," only to have the tide turn drastically when other mothers blame Rose for endangering another child. For seemingly, Amanda, one of the biggest bullies, did not make it outside to safety and lies in Intensive Care in a coma.
The media frenzy skewers Rose as negligent, with hints of criminal prosecution and lawsuits hanging over her head, even as she sits beside her daughter's bedside, awaiting her recovery from smoke inhalation.
Moral, legal, and ethical themes provide a backdrop for this series of events, beginning with the media frenzy, legal posturing, and serious dilemmas that have arisen from the tragedy. Rose is determined to get to the bottom of what happened that day, but as she asks questions, more arise, leading her down a pathway and on a journey to construction companies, local factories, and politicians. Wending her way through her questions, she uncovers more and more clues pointing to blackmail, conspiracy, and murder.
What connects a construction company, a potato chip factory, and a politician? What do any of them have to do with the fire in the cafeteria? And what unique situation lies at the center of it all?
Scottoline has a talent for leading the reader on a nail biting journey, turning those pages rapidly in the pursuit of answers to these questions. I couldn't help but love the characters of Rose, her husband Leo, and especially the plucky Harry Potter reading Melly. Save Me is about so much more than the initial questions of who you would save during a tragedy. It led to questions about responsibility, negligence, and what nefarious individuals might do for profit and fame. Five stars.
First, I love Lisa Scottoline - her Sunday column are the best of homespun humor - her legal books are wonderful but she missed something in this book, the characters were not well defined. I felt lost about the husband's role, also her friend popping in and out didn't make a lot of sense. She went off about a happening in her earlier life that i can understand contributed to her feelings about the fire, but really just confused the issue. Not her best work by far, but that doesn't mean that i won't still buy her next book as I have all her past books. She just needs to get off the bandstand of troubled men and women and get back to her legal mysteries with characters we know and love.
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