πŸ‘ΆπŸ‘ΆπŸ‘ΆπŸ‘Ά: The Paris Secret, by Natasha Lester

The Paris Secret

So this is the second book by the same name I've read in the past couple of months. The first one, as mentioned in my previous post, was an audiobook I had assumed was this one, but had indeed been written 2 years earlierπŸ™ˆ. The covers both had the Eiffel Tower, so I didn't even think to verify the author. Thankfully, it was also a well-written novel, so I didn't end up wasting my time.

Now onto the novel at hand... Natasha Lester is certainly a talented author! I am a fan of dual timelines, but very particular when it comes to the use of this literary technique. Quite often, one time period ends up being more engaging than the other, but surprisingly, @natashalesterauthor nailed it and I was equally invested in each moment in time. It was thoroughly entertaining to attempt to solve the puzzle of Kat Jourdan's grandmother's secret. And though I'm not a huge fan of romance, the love story was convincing, beautiful, and kept me longing for a connection! And how I adored Skye and her tenacious spirit; it was exciting learning about women's fight to fly during WWII through her journey.

Now, I'm really looking forward to Ms. Lester's newest novel to be released in January, 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑻𝒉𝒓𝒆𝒆 π‘³π’Šπ’—π’†π’” 𝒐𝒇 π‘¨π’π’Šπ’™ 𝑺𝒕. π‘·π’Šπ’†π’“π’“π’†!

Read 10/13/22

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