Reviews

Out of the Ashes by Kara Thomas

lyakimov's review against another edition

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3.0

This book was fine, but not really memorable because the story didn't feel necessarily unique compared to other books in this genre. The twist at the end about the identity of the killer of Sam's family was so out of place. So her dad killed the whole family and the baby daddy and faked his own death, and then ran away with Lyndsey who he knows is not his biological child and starts a new life and had a whole other wife and kids?? And the reason he did all this was because the mom was going to take the daughters and leave him because he admitted to the mom that he helped cover up the murder of that Polish girl. Like...what. We really had so little information on the dad other than mostly nice things but also that he was a flawed human being - he was kind, he took care of people and helped others, but sometimes had a temper - but it seemed WAY out of nowhere to help hide a body of a murdered woman and then kill his whole family in a panic and take his baby and fake their deaths. It just didn't seem fathomable since we had so little information on the dad, it was just weird like that twist just didn't sit well.

Also, the story about Sam's foster uncle Gil being a veteran but in reality her parents lied and he was not even overseas? What was the reason for that, I think that's a pretty ridiculous lie if all there is to it is that he had to relocate for a new job because he got fired. Who makes up that kind of excuse instead of just telling Sam "he relocated for a new job." Such an easy thing to say! I don't understand that. And then...there is the man Detective Steven Rhodes who is the ultimate dirty cop/villain and then...nothing really happens with him by the end of the book?? Great. I am frustrated how a lot of the plot points just kind of go nowhere or are explained as irrelevant later on (and were included in the story solely to confuse the reader so that they can't guess who the real killer was until the lackluster end-of-book reveal). When I got to the murderer reveal, I had to rewind the audiobook like 3 times because I truly didn't get that they were saying the dad was the killer. I was like "no, that's impossible, they aren't talking about the dad because that makes no sense" but I was wrong. And also, all the Ealy family KNEW??? All need to be in JAIL!!!

The very end with Sam going to meet Lyndsey but not saying anything much to her and then thinking "well she's going to find out soon and her whole life will be ruined" well that's so great, and that is an extremely lackluster ending because we don't even see Lyndsey find out?? There's not really a reunion, it just is weird. I needed a little more than that to wrap up the book, and it almost seems like it's open-ended for a sequel even though that's unlikely, just because of how weirdly sudden the book ends and how many things haven't been concluded.

samantha_sahm_reads's review against another edition

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3.0

3⭐️

This book follows Samantha who is going back to the small town she grew up in 22 years later after her whole family died in a house fire. When a new detective takes interest in the case she wants to get answers also.

Sadly this wasn’t a favorite for me, there were so many extra characters that weren’t necessary to the plot and also to many side plots. At times I found myself getting confused and alittle bored. That being said the final twist was good! I saw a couple side twist coming but not the main one.

litwithleigh's review against another edition

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2.0

Writing: 3.5/5 | Plot: 3/5 | Ending: ummm???

SYNOPSIS

Samantha returns to Carney to clean out her uncle's house after he dies and finds her sucked back into the case of her family's murder.

MY OPINION

This was an Amazon First Reads that I never got around to until now. Tbh I think this is the only First Reads I've actually read, despite downloading one every month. This is why I refuse to get book subscriptions. Plus it helps that they never deliver to Quebec LOL.

ANYWAYS, this was... ight. I think 3 stars is a bit generous but you know me... I'm a generous spirit (CLEARLY SARCASM). update: changed it to a 2 because let's be real lol This definitely had potential, but the storytelling was a bit strange. When I finished, I double checked that the author doesn't usually write TV/movie scripts. Why? Because the dramatic scenes were so bitesized and ended so abruptly, it felt like I was watching a movie. Every time Sam drove 80 miles to confront a suspect, she'd literally have a 30-second exchange with them and then storm off. Huh??? Homegirl never asked any pertinent follow up questions. She was like: did you kill my family? Suspect: no. Sam: Ok then I hate u bye. Waste of gas if you ask me.

Also, idk if this was because I read the book over the span of a week, but there were too many damn characters. I usually don't complain about this (shocking — ya'll know I love to lodge a complaint) but there were too many Ealy's and not enough time was spent on flushing them out. It's kinda like when you take your contacts out and everything is blurry but you can still make out the shape of things. It didn't help that the author was using two diff names for one character throughout the book (Mitch and Michelle).

Not only were there too many characters, but too much was going on and too many strings were left untied at the end. I can't get into it without spoilies so you know what time it is...

SPOILERS ALERT. SCROLL TO BOTTOM.



1) The missing persons' cases needed to go. It was so irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. Also, fuck ya'll for literally helping your step?half?-brother commit murder without a single qualm but then be mad af at the town's crooked cop for his alleged crimes. What in the world????

2) This citizens gone rogue tale went a lil TOO rogue for my liking. I'm begging Meacham and Sam to communicate. If this was a romcom, the trope would be miscommunication. Also, why did Sam try to bang him on the anniversary of his daughter's death? Bold move.

3) Can you really just exhume bodies without the consent from the next of kin? My quick google search says no. Also... why were the identities of the burned bodies not confirmed originally? I know the town was notorious for shoddy policework but the author never gave us a reason for them NOT wanting to run a lil DNA test to make sure they had the right people.

4) Why did Gil go to New York and pretend he was in Afghanistan? Idk maybe she explained this but it got lost amongst the other 10259025 things going on in this book.

5) The fact she used her coochie to sneak drugs into prison sent me into orbit. You're telling me no one noticed homegirl reaching up her shorts, popping out an entire Diva cup, shaking out and baggy of pills, and passing them over to Boggs in the visitor's lounge at prison? And what did she do with the cup? I don't remember her popping that bad boy back in? Also that's serious talent for pulling it out whilst sitting... IYKYK!!!!!!

6) Why wasn't Sam the least bit torn up about assisting Gil with his su!cide. She had more emotions about CJ Ealy's banging body than this whole event. Twas odd.

7) What in the fresh fuck was that ending? So after spinning your tires having unproductive convos all over Carney, you solve the case with the help of a PI? Why not start with the PI? Or wait... COMMUNICATE WITH MEACHAM???? And then once you FINALLY figure out what happened to your family and that your lil sister is actually alive and well, you just go to the diner where she works and... that's it? Then you're like, oh well, Meacham will eventually find her and break the news. I can't believe it but I was actually disappointed there wasn't an epilogue because unless this is gonna be a series, talk about unsatisfactory.







SPOILERS DONE

PROS AND CONS

Pros: sometimes funny, fast paced, case itself was intriguing

Cons: characterizations were lacklustre, too many subplots, ending was BLEH, many side eye moments

___

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karlyo83's review against another edition

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4.0

My Rating System: 4⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ticked nearly all the boxes THOROUGHLY ENJOYED IT!!

Samantha Newsom is a nurse in a busy stressful job in New York City, she is trying to keep her life on track, but Sam has a dark past that she doesn’t share with anyone. When Sam was 13 years old her entire family was murdered in their home (including her baby sister) and then the house was burnt to the ground.

Her last words to her mother haunt her, that last hug from her father and uncle and the giggle from her baby sister are never far from her mind. Having a last minute sleep over with her friend Sam was spared the same fate.

Twenty-two years later she is back in her home town after her uncles death and everything is brought back to the fore. The mishandling of evidence by the police, suspects that were never followed up and now a new investigator may have new evidence to assist in solving the murders of the Newsom family.

Can Sam find out the truth once and for all but still leave town alive??


Ok… cards on the table I started this book directly after a stinker - soooo my opinion may be skewed slightly but I still think this is a worthy 4 stars so I am sticking with it!!!

knuckledown's review against another edition

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dark mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated

4.0

eladams07's review against another edition

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emotional mysterious sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

emperorcupcake's review against another edition

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2.5

Oh man, I wanted to love this. It has one of my favourite kinds of plots, and look at this gorgeous cover!! And it was so close to being good, if only it hadn't tried to throw everything into the crockpot. It's like Fridge Clean Out Soup. This is how you end up with two week old celery in your soup. Random Chinese leftovers. And pickles, cause pickles are a vegetable, right?

I looove a "person returns to their small hometown and long buried secrets come out" story. So I was excited for this. And while I did enjoy the atmosphere and lived in feel of the small, upstate NY town, I could not keep track of all these characters and how they were related. And some of them had storylines that just went... nowhere? While the main mystery is solved, it felt like there were a lot of things left hanging that just didn't even need to be there. There was a whole reveal about the uncle that literally meant nothing and went nowhere. why???

And then there's the absolute chaos demon of a main character. This woman gets inexplicably horny whenever she's in the same room as a man. Which I mean fine, get it girl, but you're in town because your family was murdered and you just found out your sister might be alive. Right after the townie hunk she slept with* gets killed, she's making moves on the detective investigating her family's murder! Focus, here! She was so frustrating, like she seems to do all this random shit without any introspection at all. And yet she wasn't unhinged enough to be interesting. She was just... confusing.

*and by "slept with" I mean "grabbed him in the middle of an apple orchard and got down to business against a tree," bc this woman seriously has no impulse control.

There was some good stuff here, it just didn't come together for me.

donnaratcliff's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5⭐️

itsmeayo's review against another edition

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3.0

to say i was disappointed is an understatement

emmafiletti's review against another edition

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reflective

1.0