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Faanati Mamea Mamea itibaren Kachhar, Chhattisgarh 495453, Hindistan itibaren Kachhar, Chhattisgarh 495453, Hindistan

Okuyucu Faanati Mamea Mamea itibaren Kachhar, Chhattisgarh 495453, Hindistan

Faanati Mamea Mamea itibaren Kachhar, Chhattisgarh 495453, Hindistan

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I knew I had the "right" killer this time!!!! Ya-hooo, I got one right. lol From back cover: A fashion magazine features editor, Leah McDevitt is haunted by the memory of her cherished younger sister, Melissa, who vanished years ago. Missy, whose extraordinary eyes - one blue, one brown - may have lured her abductor to her...When Leah receives a letter from death row inmate Raymond Lambert, she eagerly agrees to pay him the long-standing reward for information about Melissa - even if it means coming face-to-face with a notorious serial killer. But before Lambert can impart his secrets, he himself is killed. Devastated but determined, Leah heads to the Maine woods to seek out private investigator Ethan Sanger, who authored a book about Lambert in exchange for yet another of Lambert's terrible secrets. Leah and Ethan strike a sparking passion with the power to heal their painful pasts. But someone has his eye on Leah...someone who knows more than he should...and who won't be satisfied until Leah sees the truth with her own eyes."

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I read this book with my sister in a self-formed summer reading club that started and ended with this book. She moved...so it ceased.

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Loved it! The characters are just awesome, love the witty banter! On to book 3.

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Sure, it's a jingoistic pageant, but it's a great jingoistic pageant, and--besides--it is the most melancholy,ironic, self-aware--and laugh-filled--jingoistic pageant ever staged. In Act V, Henry tells Katherine that together they will produce a son, and that this warlike paragon of chivalry will march to the Holy Land and "take the Turk by the beard." Yet we should know--and Shakespeare's audience certainly knew--that this boy would grow up to be Henry VI, the sickly, prayerful unstable man who lost England's hold on France forever and precipitated the Wars of the Roses. This play celebrates the wheel of time and the golden warrior king who the wheel's many revolutions--in the course if the preceding ten acts of Henry IV--has produced, yet it never ceases to be conscious of the fact that success is always fleeting and that not even majesty, no matter how magnificent it may be in itself, can last forever.

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Didn't really care about any of the characters until the very end.