There You'll Find Me
J**V
Love the characters, smile at the end.
Grief is perhaps the most unpredictable of emotions. It changes from situation to situation, from person to person. Finley Sinclair is stuck in a deep black place following the death of her older brother Will. He was a humanitarian and CNN reporter, with a passion for building schools in Afghanistan. Islamic terrorists blew up one of his schools, taking him, a host of kids and parents along with Finley's faith and happiness from this world. She reacted by going wild, then falling into a serious depression. Therapy helped somewhat, but she's still pretty much a wounded bird who feels that God has abandoned her. It used to be that her passion for music, either by playing violin or piano, would make her feel whole, but the piece she's been unable to finish, the one she needs to nail at a college audition, remains without an ending. When the story opens, Finley's on her way to Ireland for a year as an exchange student to be a member of the O'Callaghan family which is comprised of Sean, recently retired from the military, Nora, his wife, pre-teen Liam, obsessed with Legos and girls and Erin, a super smart girl who is Finley's age. They operate a bed and breakfast in Abbeyglen, the town where Will spent a similar exchange year. Finley's hoping that by visiting the places Will described in his journal covering that year, she can find the missing notes and complete her composition. Her life gets complicated and interesting when the stewardess offers her a vacant seat in first class and she wakes with her head nestled on the shoulder of hot teen actor Beckett Rush, on his way to film a new vampire movie at a castle in Abbeyglen. While sparks fly, Finley's extremely wary of having anything to do with him, in part because she's trying to get well past the sensation her acting out caused when she lost it after Will's death, but more so because she can't imagine having anything to do with someone whose picture is in countless tabloids carousing with eager young starlets. Surprises continue in an interesting succession. When she starts as a senior at the all girls high school, she meets Beatrice Plummer, the queen bee whose cousin is starring opposite Beckett. She's a truly nasty person and warns Finley off as soon as she has an inkling there might be anything brewing. If Finley has her way, she'll never see him again, but it turns out he's staying at the B&B and often eats with the O'Callaghans because they make him feel normal. When Finley can't sleep one night, she heads out for some fresh air and finds Beckett reading his lines. He talks her into reading the other parts and realizes that something about their interaction makes him better able to internalize his dialogue. He proposes a deal. If she'll become his assistant, he'll take her to the places mentioned in Will's journal and help her find the mysterious Celtic cross that was in a photo on the last page. Finley hesitates, but she has a strong feeling that if she can find this grave, it will unlock the rest of the piece. School involves a couple other things which will alter her life in amazing ways. Her English teacher assigns a senior citizen residing at a local nursing home to each of them. Finley gets Cathleen Sweeney who is dying from bone cancer and intimidates the heck out of her. It takes a while, but with encouragement from the staff and eventually from Beckett, she starts to realize the woman is hurting as much, if not more than she is, and if she can figure out why and fix it, she might start feeling better herself. Her other encounter is with Sister Maria, her music tutor who is as cool a nun as you could ever ask for. It's her feedback and questions that help Finley start to regain her lost faith in God and begin to look outside herself. What really pulled me in was the way Finley's relationship with Beckett evolved. They're a lot more alike than either is willing to admit and the slow and uneven way their romance grows is great to follow. Finley has a terrible time trying to regain the faith and belief in God that was a huge part of her life before Will was killed. Her way of coping with people getting close to her and discovering the depth of her fears manifests itself in a very scary way near the end of the book, but the ending is just about perfect. I bought this right after reading the author's YA trilogy A Charmed Life because that series was flat-out funny and next to impossible to put down. This book was just as good, but in a feel-good romance way. I thought the main characters were very likable, the spark level just right and the ending satisfying. It's a great book to add to either a young adult or Christian fiction collection and I'm sure plenty of my library patrons will agree.
J**
Christian fiction sans cheese.
A MUST READ!!! This book was well written, smooth flowing with characters who are full of real life flaws making them relateable. This is a story about love and loss, forgiveness and grace, healing and recapturing the hope that only God can give.The past two years have been rough for 18 year old Finley Sinclair, beginning with the death of her older brother Will at the hands of terrorists and ending with a series of bad choices that have left her feeling empty inside; unable to hear God's voice. In an effort to fix things in her life, she decides to follow in Will's footsteps and heads Ireland to finish out her Senior Year of High School. Equipped with Will's journal, depicting all the places he visited while staying in Ireland, and a fierce determination she hopes to retrace his steps and get back what's been missing in her own life. Along the way she meets some interesting people who help her to see that sometimes, trusting and releasing control is the only way to be able to truly see and hear God.Like any teenager, Finley has to navigate her way through friendships, boys and mean girls at school but she also has her on going battle with grief to deal with. Her coping skills aren't the best and she finds herself in a serious battle with food and body image issues. She's surrounded by stereotypical "Hollywood" types as well as the Irish girls she encounters at school who she sees as being tiny and beautiful. She fights a daily battle with what she sees in the mirror verses what the world sees when they look at her. Thankfully, she has people who love and care for her and want to help her but she has to be willing to give up control.One of the people she meets who doesn't fit into her well laid plans is 19 year old Beckett Rush. Their first encounter is both awkward and funny and certainly isn't their last. Beckett is a native Irishman who is tall, blonde, gorgeous and just happens to be Hollywood's current "It boy". Finley knows "his type" and she's neither impressed nor interested. Through a series of humorous events and witty banter, Beckett ends up as Finley's tour guide of Ireland and they both discover that things aren't always what they seem from the outside. (You can't always believe everything you see on t.v. or read in the checkout line.) As the line of their friendship begins to blur, they both have to figure out what it means to be who you truly are and to live a life that has meaning.Sister Maria is Finley's music tutor and one funny nun! (I spent 8 years in Catholic school. I can attest to the lack of humor some nuns have.) She is loving and patient with Finley while also imparting wisdom. She helps her to understand that sometimes it's not that God isn't speaking to us but that we weren't listening. She explains to Finley that sometimes we hold onto our anger, our control like an addiction because it's easier then letting go. (I could so relate to this exchange it was scary)"To truly try means to accept God's love, his healing, to accept the world can be ugly, but your heart doesn't have to be. It takes courage, Finley the warrior. You haven't held on to your anger and bitterness in search of healing, but as a banner of your hurt. Because it's real and visible and strong, " she said. "But so is God's love and so are those arms he's holding out for you."This was a clean book which was refreshing, no profanity, no sex yet it had plenty of romantic tension and I enjoyed the Scripture that was woven throughout it. Jones, did a wonderful job of describing the layout of the Emerald Isle, bringing all the important landmarks to life.
J**R
Loved Beckett and Finley 🖤
I must say I picked up this intrigued by the movie preview. But this book was great. Finley is in her senior year of high school, and wanting to follow in her late brothers footsteps, she studied abroad in Ireland. She crosses paths with a famous movie actor, Beckett, who is also going to Ireland to finish filming a movie. Their paths keep crossing unexpectedly. Finley, besides completing her senior year, wants to follow a journal her brother left of his trip. Beckett steps up to the plate to help out. They eventually are left with one last picture, they find, on her last day, completing her trip. All the while, both characters growing in their own way upon each completed pictures found. This book ends with a happily ever after and it was very cute.Pros: I loved the story line. It was unique unlike anything I think I’ve read before. Reading about the beautiful Ireland coastline and places to visit was amazing. I would look them up and just really embrace how the characters were feeling. It was a wholesome book. A host family went out of their way to house Finley and were quite lovely. The raw feelings felt about her late brother make you feel genuinely sad for her and her family. Something that would never be easy.Cons: There was a very sensitive issue regarding an eating disorder. I truly wish it was handled better along with her mental health. She seemed to have a grasp on it while in the states and then ignored it while in Ireland. It was hard to read. There was a lot of bullying that I wish could have been addressed.Overall it was a good book. I can’t wait to see the movie! Quick read too you fall captive to the pages.
G**S
A surprising treat
I bought this book by accident when messing around with my new Kindle, and I am so glad that I did. I absolutely adored this book. The complex and interesting characters, the setting which was a bit different, and the dark undertones which make the book a bit different to any other typical love story. I read one review that said the religion in it was a bit 'heavy' but I didn't find that to be true at all. It was tastefully handled and was fun to read. Most of all it made the character a bit more interesting rather than the atypical damsel in distressing moaning about every little thing.So, to summarise, a wonderful book. Even as an older reader, I thoroughly enjoyed it and would read it again.
S**Y
Peculiar christanity
The book was a fairly straightforward poor little rich girl story. The attempt to give insight into eating disorder was brave if unimaginative. But the Christianity portrayed was very winner takes all
T**Y
Mills and Boone plus god
Mills and Boone plus god
K**Z
Five Stars
Excellent read couldn't put it down
M**Y
Didn't feel finished, also not like movie
Watched this movie so I thought I'd give the book a shot. It is NOT like the movie, the movie barely talked about religion, whereas it's a huge deal in the book.All in all, I liked it. I didn't like the ending. It felt like it just..... stopped. I'm confused about what happened with her audition. What happened with Taylor and Beatrice.... did she just leave Erin to deal with her bully?
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