Helpful Score: 6
Similar to Jody Picoult? I beg to differ. While I enjoyed Ms. Moriarty's first book "The Center of Everything", I couldn't even finish this one. The author writes about difficult subject matters - mother/daughter/family relationships and a terrible accident, but I never felt any connection to the characters or the story. I didn't like or care about the mother or the daughter. I was so bored. When I found myself skimming pages, I skipped to the end. This was a very disappointing read.
Helpful Score: 4
I thought this was an awful book, It was more about the mothers problems and I thought had little to do with the poor teenage daughter who actually went through something horrible.
Helpful Score: 4
After reading everyone's review of this book and someone saying they liked it even more than "The Center of Everything" (which I read twice because I enjoyed it so much) I just had to read "The Rest of Her Life." I was very disappointed. First off, everyone said this was a sequel to "The Center of Everything" (which is why I bought it). It's NOT. It is a completely different story. "The Center of Everything" was much better and kept me turning the pages. With "The Rest of Her Life" I kept looking to see how many pages I had to go before I finished it. Not that it was a horrible book but just not very good. I found the plot rather boring and the characters really bland. I especially hated how it ended. It didn't leave me wanting to read a sequal but I think Laura Moriarty could have done a better job tying up the loose ends. It almost seemed like she just wanted to end the story and so she did. No deep meaning behind it, no make you feel good moments, nothing.
Helpful Score: 2
I enjoyed this book immensely. It is something that could happen to us all in just one moment of inattention, your life and that of your family and the victim's family are changed forever. A lesson for us all.
Helpful Score: 2
This was the first book I read by Laura Moriarty, and I enjoyed it. It was a fast read, focusing on the relationship between mother and daughter (Leigh and Kara) after a tragic accident. I thought the author accurately captured the tensions between the two, as well as artfully telling the story of Leigh's life with her own mother and sister. If you like novels by Jodi Picoult, you'll enjoy this book. It was a fast, fairly engaging read, but not entirely memorable.