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bookbriefs 's review for:
The Rules for Disappearing
by Ashley Elston
The Rules for Disappearing is one of those books that is so different than everything else I have been reading lately. Sometimes I feel like I read the same storyline over and over. And it is a storyline that I love, but nonetheless it starts to get a little old the more you read it. But that is just not the case with The Rules for Disappearing. I loved how fresh and unique the concept was to me. I loved that the main character had some edge and anger to her. I loved how there was a mystery that we needed to solve, along with a reluctant romance, and along with amazing character development. The Rules for Disappearing was a complete win for me!
Anna, or Meg, or Isabelle, or whatever Anna's name of the week was. I swear the poor girl had to change lives and names a million different times it seems. I can't even imagine how that would be. I love that she created the idea of a "go-bag". She had to be ready to go at a moments notice and she had no idea who did what to land her and her family in the witness protection program. That also had to be frustrating. So by the time the book starts, and now Meg and her sister "Mary" get dumped in the middle of nowhere it seems like, it was really easy for me to picture how annoyed and frustrated she must have been with everything. So it made perfect sense that she didn't want to make friends or stand out at this new place. I would have done the same thing. But of course, when you want to stand out you can't get noticed and when you just want to quietly blend in you stand out like a sore thumb. And it was no different for Meg/Anna. Being a new girl in a tiny town drew lots of attention to her, and right away there was a potential love interest. But it was not insta love at all. Maybe insta curiosity, which was super cute.
Ethan was kind and charming. I loved that he was always offering to drive Meg/Anna places and that he would take her home from work just so that she didn't have to walk out in the cold. Ethan is the kind of book boyfriend that you could easily see yourself dating in real life. He was the real deal, and not a jerk at all. I mean, bad boys are fun in books but I wouldn't want to date one.
What I loved about The Rules for Disappearing was that it was an adorable romance stuck inside this cool and kind of creepy mystery. Why did Anna and her family end up in the witness protection program in the first place? What happened, and why do they have to move around all the time? Why wasn't their first or second move and new identity enough? I also loved that this book kept me on my toes. I didn't always know what was going to happen. There were a few twists and turns that completely took me by surprise. I haven't read anythign by Ashley Elston before, but I am already a fan of her writing. It just seems effortless how she makes everything work. All of the characters fit together like a beautiful puzzles and her writing style was almost lyrical to me. I really just loved it. The whole package of The Rules for Disappearing worked for me. Fans of contemporary romance, realistic fiction, action, suspense, mystery, and heck just about anything should pick up this book immediately. You will love it just as much as I did! I don't even think my review did this book justice. There is such depth and complexity in every character, even the secondary characters. Ashley Elston paid such attention to even the smallest of details in her writing, that I want to go back through the book again and see what little things I didn't pick up on in the first reading. I really and truly enjoyed this book.
Anna, or Meg, or Isabelle, or whatever Anna's name of the week was. I swear the poor girl had to change lives and names a million different times it seems. I can't even imagine how that would be. I love that she created the idea of a "go-bag". She had to be ready to go at a moments notice and she had no idea who did what to land her and her family in the witness protection program. That also had to be frustrating. So by the time the book starts, and now Meg and her sister "Mary" get dumped in the middle of nowhere it seems like, it was really easy for me to picture how annoyed and frustrated she must have been with everything. So it made perfect sense that she didn't want to make friends or stand out at this new place. I would have done the same thing. But of course, when you want to stand out you can't get noticed and when you just want to quietly blend in you stand out like a sore thumb. And it was no different for Meg/Anna. Being a new girl in a tiny town drew lots of attention to her, and right away there was a potential love interest. But it was not insta love at all. Maybe insta curiosity, which was super cute.
Ethan was kind and charming. I loved that he was always offering to drive Meg/Anna places and that he would take her home from work just so that she didn't have to walk out in the cold. Ethan is the kind of book boyfriend that you could easily see yourself dating in real life. He was the real deal, and not a jerk at all. I mean, bad boys are fun in books but I wouldn't want to date one.
What I loved about The Rules for Disappearing was that it was an adorable romance stuck inside this cool and kind of creepy mystery. Why did Anna and her family end up in the witness protection program in the first place? What happened, and why do they have to move around all the time? Why wasn't their first or second move and new identity enough? I also loved that this book kept me on my toes. I didn't always know what was going to happen. There were a few twists and turns that completely took me by surprise. I haven't read anythign by Ashley Elston before, but I am already a fan of her writing. It just seems effortless how she makes everything work. All of the characters fit together like a beautiful puzzles and her writing style was almost lyrical to me. I really just loved it. The whole package of The Rules for Disappearing worked for me. Fans of contemporary romance, realistic fiction, action, suspense, mystery, and heck just about anything should pick up this book immediately. You will love it just as much as I did! I don't even think my review did this book justice. There is such depth and complexity in every character, even the secondary characters. Ashley Elston paid such attention to even the smallest of details in her writing, that I want to go back through the book again and see what little things I didn't pick up on in the first reading. I really and truly enjoyed this book.