Reviews

Aspettami by A.L. Jackson

reading_with_2_book_lovers's review against another edition

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5.0

This is book 4 in this series and wow was it good.
this is Austin and Edies story.
this book was emotionally raw, heavy and packed full of power. Such a great read.

somanybooksineedmoretime's review against another edition

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5.0

Oh the tears I cried...ugh. I just loved it.

nikkil521's review against another edition

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5.0

Well.. AL Jackson has done it, again!! I can't even begin to formulate the words for how I love this book. I fell in love with the Sunder boys, Austin is no exception. I knew he was going to break my heart. I knew he was going to be to the core gut wrenching. And I wasn't wrong. Grab your tissue, you're going to need it. Austin is just so sweet, and so broken yet so strong. He will amaze and inspire and make you want to wrap your arms around him all at the same time.
And Edie, what a fire in that woman, another broken soul trying to find her way through the heartbreak that is her past.
These two bond in ways that is beyond any words can explain and they complete each other and they heal each other.
If you loved Baz, and Lyrik.. You're a goner for Austin. I promise you won't be disappointed!!

theestherhadassah's review against another edition

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5.0

DISCLAIMER: I received an e-ARC of this book in exchange for honest review. Non-spoiler review.

SpoilerFirstly, this book was amazing! I cannot even begin to express how good it was. I do not know how she does it. The story shatters over and over, and then it rebuilds. The transitions from the characters is brilliant. For anyone who is familiar with the lovely A.L's work, this story follows Austin, Sebastian Stone's younger brother. *SIGHS* I cannot get him out of my head. His pain is so . . . UGH! I cannot find the words. This book is an emotional roller coaster, but so worth it. This story is about learning to trust again. It's about second (and third, fourth and fifth) chances. It's about accepting the past, moving forward and forgiving yourself. It's about realizing something is not your fault. A.L. knows how to implement what she wants readers to gather from her novels. This book is no different, if not more.

My heart is in pieces, in a very good way. I was in tears at a few points and I couldn't take it anymore. I went and stomped around for a bit, and then I went right back to reading. I love Austin and Edie. I keep rubbing my chest because my heart aches. Dead serious. No lie. It hurts. I can only think of a few other books left me like this, so I can proudly say this book hits my Top 10, easy.


August 25th

shanbreads's review against another edition

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4.0

I loved this book i was captivated from the first page and I felt all the feels while reading fbis I loved Austin and I adored Eddie as characters and I couldn’t put my kindle down until I had found out what happens next and I can’t wait to dive into the next book in series

bribookish's review against another edition

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5.0

AL Jackson is just way too amazing of a writer. I can't with her writing. I loved this book, of course. I'm so excited for Ash's story!

mells_view's review against another edition

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4.0

This was an angsty, sweet, and romantic read. Austin and Edie have a heavy past, and both of them are running from it. Fate brings them back together, and they finally start working through all of their stuff together.

What I loved most about this story is that the writing is so emotional. It makes you feel like you're really in the characters head. It's written how people think which makes it interesting.

A great read, definitely recommend it to anyone who wants to get in their feelings. It definitely accomplishes that task!

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proud_book_nerd's review against another edition

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5.0

Oh Austin and Edie....

It seems to be a recurring theme in this series. Lonely recognizes lonely. And these too had so much despair in their soles. I didn't cry but the emotional grip this story told was so very honest and real. Once again proving why I love this author!!!

alwaysbereadin's review against another edition

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3.0

I didn't like this as much as the previous 3. I was hoping Austin's story was more than this. But this was so damn emotional, just like all of A.L. Jackson's writing.

annek's review against another edition

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2.0

Lovely narration, but…
 
Reader, I struggled with this book.
 
My two stars are for the charming choices of Zachary Webber and Andi Arndt and for the lyrical flow of A. L. Jackson's prose. Jackson should write songs or poems for Webber and Arndt to vocalize for us.
 
The story, the plot and characters, however, needs more than just lovely narration.
 
Both characters wallowed in their own misery, pain, and poor choices. Neither took any initiative, said to themselves "something bad happened. Let me make sure it doesn't happen again."
 
It irritated me that there was no character development, not arch to say that these events served purpose to either of the characters or by association, to us readers.
 
From here on, there are spoilers. You are warned.
 
To be fair, Austin's reaction to Edie's (first) rape may be Jackson's explanation of how adolescent he was "back then." He interfered, shouted her secret, picked a fight with the sleazy Paul and then set Paul up for a prison stint. Does he tell her, help her take back her dignity? No. He runs away. And so does she.

This bothered me, but I could go along with the idea that a 17-year-old young man may do stupid things with good intensions, but… after three years of brooding on how these actions ruined Edie's and Austin's lives, he does it again? Austin arrived to interrupt sleazy Paul's attempt to rape Edie again (!), fight Paul again, and shout her secret again. Exhausting. For the second time, he denied her of ay choices, dignity, self-respect, or opportunity for growth or closure. This makes him the hero? Really?!?
 
As if Austin and his constant groaning about how he can't seem think-before-acting wasn’t irritating enough, Edie was more annoying. Yes, the author placed her in a terrible position of having been raped at age 14 and then giving away the baby for adoption. But there the character seemed to have plateaued. Did she do anything to learn how to prevent being attacked in the future or help her deal with the situation? NO! She goes back to live with her brother (for years, presumably) and acts as if nothing happened until Austin spills the beans (see above), then she runs away. She spends three years brooding over what happened, and doing nothing about it, until she not-so-randomly finds Austin, and does more of nothing about herself.
 
What pushed me over the edge was that Austin spends the whole book moaning about how he will never hurt Edie again. Okay, we get it. Until about 2/3 into the book, when he rapes her, and instantly feels bad. Are we back to those kind of romance books where rape is okay if he feels really, really bad after it? Are you kidding me?!?
 
…or does he? At the end, Edie tells him she wanted it and that he stopped as soon as she said "no", so it's all okay. What?!? She let him think that he raped her, and it’s okay because…why again? If we are complacent with a little sexual abuse, we can be complacent with emotional abuse? NO. NEITHER IS OKAY!
 
Other, minor irritations: why does Austin's brother and Edie's brother, who are in the same band, never look for either of them, when they go missing at the same time? How did Edie's brother not know about her pregnancy? I find it hard to believe that no one in her family would keep that from slipping, at least once, over the years. Whose parents would think that it's a good idea to let their 14-year-old daughter spend summers with a rock band?
 
Truly, the only reason I kept to the end for the book was for the gorgeous voices.