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Amelia C. Gormley

Auteur de Inertia

21+ oeuvres 328 utilisateurs 45 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Amelia Gormley

Séries

Œuvres de Amelia C. Gormley

Inertia (2012) 40 exemplaires
Giving an Inch (1817) — Auteur — 38 exemplaires
Strain (2014) 32 exemplaires
Saugatuck Summer (2014) 25 exemplaires
The Field of Someone Else's Dreams (2013) 24 exemplaires
Risk Aware (2016) 18 exemplaires
Strain: The Complete Trilogy (2018) 17 exemplaires
An Inch at a Time (2013) — Auteur — 16 exemplaires
Inch by Inch (2013) — Auteur — 14 exemplaires
The Laird's Forbidden Lover (2013) 14 exemplaires
To the Very Last Inch (2014) — Auteur — 14 exemplaires
Impulse: The Complete Trilogy (2013) 11 exemplaires
Player vs Player (1655) 10 exemplaires
Every Inch of the Way (2014) — Auteur — 8 exemplaires
Juggernaut (2015) 8 exemplaires
Bane (2015) 7 exemplaires
Strain (Strain, #2) 4 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Unconditional Surrender An M/M Military Bundle (2014) — Contributeur — 31 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Gormley, Amelia C.
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Professions
author

Membres

Critiques

Chris knew that his parents would shun him if he came out. Matt was totally out with an accepting family so thought that Chris was over exaggerating his parent's reaction. His parents reacted just as he expected when Chris came out to his father. I was blown away by the way Chris's mother reacted. I thought his father was much more the likable character. Where his mother was just homophobic and ugly, his father was at least open to listening to Chris. Family is who you choose.
 
Signalé
Connorz | 2 autres critiques | Jan 4, 2023 |
Three cheers for Satish for opening up communication. The other two dunderheads would have let everything go to hell. I enjoyed having Satish as part of the scene. All in all, this was a fun little series.
 
Signalé
Connorz | Jan 4, 2023 |
Topher Carlisle is looking forward to this summer. He's staying with his best friend, Mo, at her family's beach house on Lake Michigan. Well, he's staying at the house more than with Mo, since she'll be spending most of the summer working at a camp. But it's a free place to stay with easy access to getting in the daily swims he needs to keep in form to hold onto his swimming scholarship when he gets back to school. And he might even be able to make some money to bridge the difference between his scholarship and his full expenses.

Topher also thinks there might be a chance he could meet a guy or two at the beach. And he's not there long before he sees a total hottie. There's just one problem--he's Mo's straight, married father, Brendan. So Topher shakes that one off and tells himself he needs to get over it since Brendan will be staying at the house with him all summer.

And Topher finds a much-needed distraction in Jace, an artist from Chicago who is more than willing to be Topher's birthday one-night stand. But Topher lets Jace into a place where no one else is allowed to tread, and that just might come back to haunt him later.

As the summer goes on, everything starts to fall apart. Issues surface between Topher and Brendan. His night with Jace led to some unexpected results. And there's some family drama that Topher hoped he could stay out of that demands his attention. And none of this is good for someone like Topher who is nursing some long-standing issues as a result of emotional and sexual abuse in his childhood. Can he accept that it's okay to put those things in the past and move on? Is it possible for Topher to recognize the patterns he's stuck in so he can break out of them? And can he maybe, actually, find love?

--

I'm often a bit nervous when it comes to first-person narration. I find that it can be difficult for many authors to sustain a character voice for the entire length of a novel. And then there's the whole issue of only being able to show what the narrator sees, thinks, and feels. But when a good storyteller does first-person well, I find myself hooked from beginning to end. And this author has managed to construct a well-written narrative that never lost me at any point.

Topher's story is a complex one. There's not only a large cast of characters in his life during the summer of the story, but there's also the issues that haunt him from his past. And every one of those--the people and the issues--seem like they want to pull him in a different direction. There's definitely a great deal of tension throughout this story, though it never veers too far into the angst camp.

The only reason this doesn't pull a higher rating from me is pacing. It's not a tremendous problem--the writing is great, so I never felt myself wandering--but the story could probably have been shored up just a bit to add to the tension and drama. Still give this a solid recommendation, though.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
crtsjffrsn | 1 autre critique | Aug 27, 2021 |
May 2020
So, I finally got around to reading this. I wouldn't have picked this book up if it weren't for a challenge, but it fit a certain criteria and this was an opportunity to decrease my on-hold list.

I don't often even want to read post-apocalyptic books but, maybe because of our current circumstances, this book held my attention.


Original review - Sep 2015
Dropped at 22%.

I'm really not in the mood for something like this right now. Maybe I'll finish it at a later date, and maybe I wont.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
NannyOgg13 | 4 autres critiques | Mar 27, 2021 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
21
Aussi par
1
Membres
328
Popularité
#72,311
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
45
ISBN
35
Favoris
1

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