House without lies was an okay read. I liked Lily. She seems very passionate and driven in her goal to get these girls a home where they can live without fear and surrounded by love. She is willing to sacrifice almost everything to achieve her goal. And here is where I find it hard to connect with Lily completely. I understand such passion, but at times it felt a little unrealistic to me, especially as she is so young. That being said, who am I to judge.
Jameson is a great guy. He is fun, sweet, understanding, and everything Lily needs. She can’t carry that whole burden alone, so a little help and someone to lean on is perfect for her.
What for me fell short in this book, were a few factors:
1. I didn’t like the cover picture of the book. Having read the book, the Lily on the cover looks nothing like the Lily in the book. The Jameson may have the rough jawline, but that is where it ends. So having that picture in my mind starting off the book, and then meeting totally different people, that I didn’t enjoy.
2. Having Jameson have 2 first names and the whole story about only his mum calling him Jameson was a little far-fetched. It was a little silly people calling him Mario when he was Jameson throughout the book. Also Mario is such a silly name for such a strong character. Seriously, the Mario Bros video game. No, just no!
3. The story did make me think of the harder realities in life, abuse, neglect, living on the streets. So it was definitely a thought provoking read, but as I mentioned earlier, it was a little to unrealistically executed to feel completely real.
All in all this was an okay read, but not one I think I will go back an reread in the future.