Sweet Baby Mine by Maria Daversa

Thank you @mtdaversa @lovebookstours for letting me part of this tour and reviewing this book. I loved how easy sweet baby mine was so easy to get into and i loved . It hooked me in straight the way and need to carry on reading to found out more about Ana background and what happend to Chole. I liked how you heard from Ana and Tom perspective . There was some hard topics in sweet baby mine like self harm and mental health but it was dealt with really well. great read and i did feel emotional reading this book great writing style gripoed me all the way . 5 stars brilliant Blurb “Why is it all the bad things we’ve done in the past never stay in the past?” Ana will do anything to hold on to Tony. He’s the love of her life–the Heathcliff to her Catherine, the Rivera to her Kahlo, the Sid to her Nancy. Without him, she’s nothing. But Ana also has a secret–a youthful indiscretion that shouldn’t have happened. So, when her estranged daughter, Chloe, calls in the middle of the night to say she wants to come home, Ana finds herself caught in a web of deceit as mother and daughter share a secret so troubling it could destroy her marriage. Set in the 20th arrondissement of Paris, Sweet Baby Mine is an adult coming of age tale about the collateral damage left behind when a marriage fails spectacularly. Told in real time and from the perspectives of the two main characters: Ana and Tony, the story documents the toll secrets, lies, betrayals, and mental illness can have on a couple who once believed they’d found in each other true love. The tale is brutal, oftentimes heartbreaking, but always hopeful as it never deviates from its message. On the road to self-discovery, you will eventually learn that no matter what anyone says—no matter what flawed message you believed about yourself growing up, you are a good person and deserving of love. A dark psychological drama, Sweet Baby Mine is unputdownable.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Hanging Out by Sheila Liming

Penelopes Purple Passions by Penelope Chaisson

Pawnshop of Stolen Dreams by Victoria Wiliamson