I loved this book because it signaled the best days of summer I could’ve lived but I couldn’t: the Florida life, beaches, diving and boats, hot men and kisses, and, most important of all, romance.
The book starts with Veronica, an archeologist who happens to be the product of 2 other archeologists who happen to fall in love. However, her mom died in a young age due to an « accident » in the sea and her dad didn’t reveal that until something awful happened to her. She got divorced by her ass of a husband, a year after he drank a little too much and drover both of them to an accident that led to her losing both her hearing and her baby. She lost Al the hope and the light in her and got swallowed up by deep depression and a broken-heart, and that’s why her dad gave her his last attempt to get her back on track before he dies of cancer- he’s only got a few months to live.
The story started off amazing and enticing. I would totally pictured reading it on the beach watching the waves as they go by, swallowing a person after the other. However, there are a few things that kept nagging at me all the time I visibly became irritated:
1- Her almost always internal monologue of “I’m deaf= I’m alone= I’m afraid” even though she’s acting waaayyy stronger and much more dépendant than me!!
2- the amount of precautionary thoughts and actions she took were absurd that I think the author forgot that she herself is a girl- we wear precautions and trust issues like second skin. The way that she doesn’t make other side plans -which are a norm in such a demo starting field- made me fée like she’s a new archeologist not a professor, let alone the fact that she “aided her father” in other expeditions since she was as little as 8 her claim, not mine).
3- The cluelessness of the lead characters, the fact that both of them “dismissed” their feeling for each other until the last 10 chapters was not settling right for me. It’s like saying “I love the taste of cheese but I hate it.”
4- Lastly, the one that made my head spine for a while, proofreading was done poorly. The punctuations that I depend on for assistance in understanding the situations were sometimes missing, aside from missing half of the sentences which begin with conjunctions.
Other than that, this story will definitely be a summer read that’s worth reading- might even take a spot in my every summer must read personal list.