*follow-up |
how did Lucca/Evie find out George was Mr. Smith? I must have missed this explaination. |
If you believe the simple denouement that George is Mr. Smith, then you've been duped by the obvious, just like the losers searching for Ralph Tate's ugly painting. Ryan is Mr. Smith, forced into assuming this role along with all the other nefarious businesses when his grandfather, the original Mr. Smith, died. Evie (Lucca) always wanted the sweet house and the husband, and Ryan fit the mold. Ryan wanted out of the Mr. Smith-business, so he slowly and selectively eliminated the "employees." By setting up the fake Lucca Marino and killing her off, he thought he could keep the real Lucca, with whom he was falling in love, from ever being able to leave him and return to her past identity. But as in all things, Lucca lied first, convincing Ryan that she loved him by changing his stolen business accounting turned over to "Mr Smith" to make his business look unworthy of takeover. Then she made him believe she "caught" George as the real Mr. Smith, so Ryan could exit that con game for good. Devon went to Ryan's home in Lake Forbing (see chapter 21) to set up the whole tech room so Lucca could assume the role and run it as Miss Smith, completely separate from Ryan. And with that, author Ashley Elston has set us up for a sequel. |
What was the significance of the origami piece.. |
What is the significance of King Harvest Fan message board? I’m sure it was mentioned previously but I can’t remember |
Is this where she communicated with Devon? They would leave coded messages to arrange their meetups. |
She made origami with her Mom and I’m guessing this became something like her calling card to show she was there |
I'm at 70% on the audiobook version, and I'm struggling to complete this book. I'm finding it hard to follow and get annoyed with the constant time frame changes. I was going to wait to open this thread until I finished the book but decided today that I might give up so I'd go ahead and read the spoilers. The comments here are more interesting than I'm finding the book. |
I read a Goodreads review that sums it up better than I did: "What it came down to was two things: boredom and disbelief. There was never a point in my reading of this book when I wasn't experiencing one or the other." |
I just finished the book and have been waiting to come on this thread. I thought it was meh. I’d give it 2.5/5. It wasn’t awful but it wasn’t good either. I thought Gone Girl or anting by Dennis Lehane is far better. I also disliked The Last Thing He Told Me. They both just seem kind of trite and ridiculous is the best way I can say it. I wish I had liked this more. It’s a fun genre but I’m finding just so so books here lately. I did like Going Zero, which was actually laugh out loud funny in parts. I thought it had infinitely better writing and a more interesting story line. |
I finished the book so I'm back to say that despite not enjoying most of the book, I think it has a great ending. |
I couldn’t put it down!
Great book but you have to pay attention. You can’t read and cook or change a diaper, you have to read it. |
Why do you think that? I listened to it so I was pretty much always doing something else while it was playing. I don’t think it was such a smart book that I really missed anything. What do you think you picked up? |