Book Corner

Book Review: A Life Unraveled

This is how I “read” now – I listen while I craft

Confession – I don’t read anymore. Not physical books, not even e-books. My latest obsession is audio books. I know, I know – I used to scoff and make fun of people who listen to audio books – “that’s cheating! You call that reading?!” And yet – here I am. I listen to books and craft – that’s my thing, for now, at least. And I have to admit – listening to a book being read adds a whole new dimension to reading.

But I digress.

Kindergarten teacher Lily Gallo is a happily married mother of three who considers her life perfect… until the day she’s brutally assaulted while out on a run. When the town’s high school football hero is arrested for the attack, Lily’s family suffers retaliation from local sports fans.

Recovering from her injuries, Lily wraps herself in an opioid cloud. Later, a barely avoided tragedy motivates her to flush the narcotics.Β But her return to sobriety is overshadowed by unnerving memory lapses and her husband’s growing mistrust.

As unremembered events become more disturbing, Lily is convinced that she’s being stalked. Though her attacker started the destruction of her life, someone else is determined to finish it.

A Life Unraveled by Jill Hannah Anderson

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Story Recap

Lily was out for a run, on a trail that she used every day, and ran by a person she saw nearly every time she ran. Yet, for some reason, out of the blue, this person brutally attacked her and left her for dead. Fortunately, a couple, walking their police dog, with a nose trained to find people, sniffed her out and she was rescued.

She was pretty beat up: a broken jaw, a brain bleed so they had to shave her head in order to do surgery, broken fingers, leg and ribs. She was nearly unrecognizable.

She wasn’t only physically beaten, she was also emotionally damaged.

The road to recovery was long and tedious.

To compensate for her physical pain and the mental flashbacks and panic attacks, Lily starts relying more and more on pain killers. It soon becomes a problem and she’s hiding medication around the house to hide the fact that she has developed a problem to her family.

Months go by and Lily starts to lose track of time and her memory is spotty. When her behavior starts to endanger her family, it serves as a wake-up call that she has a problem and needs help.

Her “perfect” relationship with her husband is strained and their bond starts to unravel.

In the meantime, the person who attacked her is eventually identified and sent to jail. But his sentence is light and he is soon released one year after the attack. Lily has gotten control of her opioid addiction by the time her attacker is released, or so she thinks, as strange things continue to happen to her. Even though Lily is fairly sure she isn’t taking medication anymore, her behavior is so odd and uncharacteristic that she doubts herself and her family doesn’t trust her.

When tragedy again strikes her family, her husband finally believes her about not taking medication and instead realizes that something strange is happening to them. Lily and her husband join forces and together, they try and piece together what is happening.

My Thoughts

This story was told in first person. I’m not the biggest fan of first person – I get bored being in one person’s head all the time. And this story was no exception. Even though it was important to the story that the reader KNOW and FEEL what Lily was going through, how she slowly lost control of herself and then fought to find herself again, only to struggle with possibly losing herself again, I would have liked to be inside her husband’s head to get his perspective on Lily’s behavior. I found myself getting a little bored and impatient with Lily and just wanted her to snap out of it, stop being such a wuss, though I’ll be fair and give the author credit for taking me to the very edge of frustration only to pull me back from the brink. It’s like the author knew she was pushing her readers’ patience and decided she needed to inject some strength back into her character to keep her readers from giving up on her.

I wanted to get inside the husband’s head because their relationship was strong and his love and trust in her took quite a beating – it rocked their foundation. I appreciated reading about a normal couple with strong love ties to one another not only weathering the chaos but working together and coming through the ordeal even stronger. It was refreshing to see a couple that works together instead of against each other.

I knew, about 2/3 through the book how it would end. It wasn’t super obvious but there were a few times I felt the author let the cat out of the bag a little too soon. Though I knew what was happening and who was responsible for it, I ultimately didn’t see who the actual “bad” person was, so that was as surprise.

I also really enjoyed the tug o’ war relationship between Lily and her teenage daughter. I thought that relationship was beautifully written and pretty realistic.

I didn’t roll my eyes once.

The relationship between Lily and her brother was interesting and it felt a little out-of-place in the story overall. That side story felt almost like an afterthought. I think the reason the author chose to include the brother/sister relationship in the story was to inject some humility into Lily when it came to judging people who develop addictions. Her brother started drinking shortly before he graduated from high school and that splintered her family. She never knew why her brother started drinking but she harshly judged him and in fact, they were estranged for ten years. It took her addiction to pain meds to force her to understand that addiction happens for a variety of reasons and that people who have addiction need help, not shunned. Her understanding eventually healed their relationship.

Goodreads Comments

This book was my first by this writer, and l really have mixed feelings about it. The beginning was good as was the end, but the middle was painfully long. In fact, so much was jammed into the end that it felt rushed.

I have to agree – the middle did drag. That’s why I think the brother/sister aspect of the story came into play – the author needed something more to fill the pages – Lily’s emotional self-exploration and self-centered attitude got old, fast.

Entertaining, but would have benefited from more development of the relationship between the characters. Some were so nondescript I needed to go back to remember where they were first introduced.

Agreed! In fact, when the villain of the story was revealed, I didn’t even remember who it was or what sort of relationship this person had with Lily. I think it might have worked better if the author had taken out the brother/sister part of this story and had flushed out her relationship with the villain more – I think it would have made the reveal more impactful.

Up next: The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett

Writing Stuff

A Race To Finish Before November

Race car drivers are sexy.

And if you don’t agree, then your X chromosome is asleep. πŸ˜€

They’re so sexy, in fact, that I’m going to base my NaNoWriMo project on them – well, one of them at least. Well, it won’t actually BE one of them, but based on one …. oh heck, you know what I mean.

In case you’re just tuning into the Internet and you’re wondering what in the world NaNoWriMo is – it stands for National Novel Writing Month and it happens every November. In essence, writers are asked to participate in a writing challenge by writing 50,000 words in 30 days.

And believe it or not, it’s doable. In fact, it’s VERY doable IF you commit to the challenge and write at least 1,667 words every day in November.

And don’t tell me you’re too busy – bah humbug. EVERYONE uses that excuse and if you WANT to do something, then you’ll find the time to do it, period. Get up an hour earlier or stay up an hour later. Write on your lunch hour. Write while little Joey plays t-ball. Tape your favorite TV shows then watch them later. (Think how much time THAT will save you alone!) Or take your laptop and write in your car while waiting for your youngest son to finish his saxophone lesson. (Yeah, that would be me).

I’ve participated in the challenge since 2005 – so this makes my fourth year to do the challenge.

The first year I did this, my novel was pure and utter garbage. But that didn’t bother me because what I took away from the experience was INVALUABLE. It taught me to just release my inner critic – ignore it really – and JUST WRITE. It gave me permission, if you will, to simply write and not worry about whether it made sense, or if I was using proper semantics, etc. I finished the challenge feeling freer than I EVER have as a writer.

I have no idea what I wrote the second year. In fact, I can’t seem to locate the binder (I print off the pages and put them in a binder because it’s SO SATISFYING to see the pages build up). But I’m not overly worried because it must not have been that big of a deal to me if I can’t even find it now.

Last year … I really liked my story idea. In fact, I still think it’s worthy of digging out and pursuing. And that’s saying a lot for me because I’m usually the first to discard anything I write as nonsense but this particular story … I think it has potential. So, I’m definitely keeping that one and may pull it out after this NaNoWriMo and work on it. I haven’t looked at it since last year and I think enough time has gone by now that I’ll be able to read it with an impartial eye.

This year … I had toyed around with the idea of writing a series of short stories, which I’d still like to try some NaNoWriMo, but not this year, I think. I’ve decided to write a fast-paced story around NASCAR racing.

And it’s going to be a romance story. Because I’m DONE trying to deny the fact that I enjoy romance stories – both reading them and writing them. And I’m GOOD at it. I’ve been trying to convince myself that I’m more of a “literary” writer when in fact, I think my writing is strongest when I write romance. So … why fight it. That’s what I’m going with this year.

Why NASCAR? Well, it’s my husband’s fault really. He’s converted me.

Though I wouldn’t say I’m a big-time race fan, I do enjoy watching races. Especially with my husband because he tapes the races and then fast forwards through them until someone wrecks because let’s face it, wrecks are exciting. I feel a wee bit guilty for watching racing simply for the wrecks, but, there you have it.

In the process of watching races, I’ve been paying attention to the kinds of characters these race car drivers are. They are arrogant, self-assured, and cocky, but they are also supremely vulnerable, passionate and completely flawed.

I think those qualities make up a sexy man. Hence the reason I plan on modeling my next hero after a race car driver.

The problem with writing a racing story is that I don’t really know a lot about racing, not really. I mean, I know the basics, but I know nothing about the inside “track”, so to speak. So, I went to Barnes and Noble yesterday after I dropped the boys off at school (and after I took a shower and picked up a coffee from Starbucks – hey, the kids are IN SCHOOL. Isn’t that reason enough to celebrate? *grin*).

I have to tell ya, I felt a TAD guilty indulging in one of my guilty pleasures (book shopping) while the boys were trapped inside new classrooms and having fresh syllabi shoved down their throats.

But then I got over it so … *evil grin*

At first, I picked up “NASCAR for Dummies” because let’s face it – I am a NASCAR dummy. But then “The Girl’s Guide to NASCAR” caught my eye. And when I read that Liz Allison, the author of this book, “has been a veteran of the speedway as a fan, girlfriend, wife, mother and reporter,” I knew this was the perspective I wanted to capture in my story. (And after doing a little research on Ms. Allison, it looks like she’s actually written quite a few NASCAR romance stories herself – JACKPOT!)

I can’t exactly TELL you the plot of the story, I mean, what if I go on to sell this book and make loads of money? Talk about a spoiler. *grin* But I will say that I’m excited about learning more about the sport and about writing this particular story and when you’re a writer? Being excited about a project is always a good thing.

So, I have some research to do. My goal is to have a tentative outline and character sketches drawn up before November 1st so I’ll have a general idea where I want to take this story. And I’m QUITE looking forward to the research part of it so I can impress my husband with all my new-found NASCAR knowledge. hehe

Is anyone else out there thinking about participating in NaNoWriMo this year? If so, do you have any idea what you might like to write? You’ll be hearing about NaNo A LOT on my blog in the coming months, so brace yourself. πŸ™‚

By the way, here’s an amusing time killer: Have an issue? Let a race car driver help you.

Oh, one more thing – here are four race car drivers that I’m thinking about basing my hero on – can you guess which one of the four I have a huge crush on?

Favorite Racecar Drivers

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It’s fun!