![]() The first world they travelled to didn’t really appeal to me as much (mostly because it wasn’t as build up nicely), but when we got to the second world, I loved that. With that start I considered putting this book down. It was cutting the brakes so what proof did the police have? Later on something was revealed that made feel even more flimsy for me. How is her dad less important than her connection with the traitor? Also I wondered what this apparent proof was that he had killed her dad. But that doesn’t mean you have to throw those kinds of connections away. Shouldn’t her focus of flashbacks have been on that? And not on that guy she thinks is a traitor? I understand there being romance in this book. Her focus on the two guys in her flashbacks I found odd as she had just lost her dad. I think it wasn’t so much that we were thrown into the action, but that I found it hard to connect with the main character. I found this very hard and the focus of the start of this book really threw me. Soon she discovers the truth behind her father’s death is more sinister than she ever could have imagined.įrom the start we are thrown into action with various flashbacks in between. With each encounter she begins to question Paul’s guilt-and her own heart. Marguerite can’t let the man who destroyed her family go free, and she races after Paul through different universes, where their lives entangle in increasingly familiar ways. But when Marguerite’s father is murdered, the killer-her parent’s handsome and enigmatic assistant Paul-escapes into another dimension before the law can touch him. Their most astonishing invention: the Firebird, which allows users to jump into parallel universes, some vastly altered from our own. Marguerite Caine’s physicist parents are known for their radical scientific achievements. ![]() Title: A Thousand Pieces of You (Firebird 1) by Claudia Gray ![]()
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