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Review: Losing Sight by Tati Richardson
ARC provided by the author, I also bought my own copy. This post includes affiliate links that may kick us a small percentage at no cost to you if you use them to shop. So if this post is useful, please use them to support my work -- it's so appreciated! When things are…
We Tried Trader Joe’s Gluten Free Yellow Mini Sheet Cake
with Chocolate Frosting! I've been on alert for Trader Joe's Yellow Mini Sheet Cake with chocolate frosting after seeing u/aswewaltz posted it in NY on Reddit 8 days ago. Every trip, I was disappointed. But today...finally... TJ's in the PNW have been blessed with the new gluten free sheet cake. So let's cut into it!…
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ALL THESE BEAUTIFUL STRANGERS by Elizabeth Klehfoth

Review copy provided by the publisher

All These Beautiful Strangers follows the contours of a CW show, unfolding its mystery with quiet intensity.

Boarding school. Secret society. Family drama. Mysteriously disappeared parent.

I think I’ve been conditioned by years of watching CW shows to expect the highest highs and lowest lows. I didn’t think it was a problem until I read All These Beautiful Strangers. Although it  follows the contours of what we think of as a CW show — boarding school, a secret society, teenagers being terrible to each other — All These Beautiful Strangers is more methodical and somehow quieter than you might expect.

17-year old Charlie Calloway is invited to join “the A’s”, a secret society at her boarding school and must carry out a series of increasingly difficult and morally compromising tasks to gain admittance. Once you’re in, you’re in for life. At the same time, she’s starting to uncover details around her mother’s disappearance and its connection to the A’s. What’s different here is that her parents AREN’T absentee and figure into the story significantly. And actually, for me, there was huge untapped potential in the relationship between Charlie’s dad and his brother, Teddy. And in Charlie’s relationship with Grayson.


All These Beautiful Strangers is an enjoyable read if you don’t go in expecting high drama. Told in alternating timelines between 17-year old Charlie and her parents Alastair and Grace Calloway, there’s a tick-tock quality to All These Beautiful Strangers. Charlie uncovers something, then the real details behind it are revealed in one of her parents’ chapters.

Knowing what the A’s were putting its initiates up to, I was hoping for a more diabolical resolution than we ultimately get.

3.5 stars.

Get All These Beautiful Strangers on Amazon|iBooks

Categories: Book Reviews
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