Translation: this novel addresses sexual predators (the teacher preying on an 18-year-old student variety) in a very real way. If you're faint of heart, be warned, this novel is as naughty as the average episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Review: I loved Wake, but Fade is better. Cabel struggles watching Janie put herself at risk to catch the bad guy. With no details to go on, Janie and Cabel try to figure out if its true, and if so, who the offending teacher is. They're both still working undercover for the police, and this case is intense: the cops received two calls, six months apart, on a high school-specific hotline about teachers having sex with students. Their relationship still must be a secret, but they're happy and supportive of each other. Summary: The book opens happily: Janie and Cabel are happy and have settled into a high school, virginal version of domestic bliss. Please feel free to skip ahead to my review. Thankfully, I discovered Lisa McMann's book late enough that the sequel was already out (book three, Gone, will be published in February 9, 2010.)īecause this book is the second in a series, there may be some spoilers for the first novel. Background: I really enjoyed the first book in this series, Wake, and my one complaint was that there wasn't enough of the story I wanted more.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |