Ratings3
Average rating4.3
Meredith Oliver is on the floor at the Deli Barn, next to Lisa Bellow, the most popular girl in school, and there's a gun pointed at them both. The gunman tells Lisa to come with him, and he drives away, with Lisa.
The author did what I thought would be impossible: she wrote an immensely captivating story from the point-of-view of the person that got away.
There are lots of other small but equally powerful storylines in this book—a baseball-proficient brother who is hit in the eye with a ball and goes partially blind, a mom who isn't comfortable with her role or her life, Lisa's friends who oddly become Meredith's friends—and it makes for a wonderful novel.
I'll post a full review later, but in the meantime I found this to be a gripping read. The primary point of view (we also hear from her mother) is that of Meredith Oliver, an 8th grade girl who has a mysterious connection to a classmate, Lisa Bellow, who is abducted.