Alex is the key to Breaking Free
After Holly McIntyre’s story, who knew that her brother had one that was just as equally and socially important to tell? And Ryan is just as vulnerable as the sister he loves so much. He’s been there for his family so far, but now he’s checked out, and it’s his own life he needs to get sorted before he can truly feel at home again. Breaking Free is about Ryan crashing at Zoe’s place in Melbourne and discovering the person he truly is.
For those of us who love Zoe from the Finding Your Place series, you’ll be glad to see she was there for Ryan. She’s been through so much and has grown stronger, yet even in this book, she is still under extreme stress. Yep, we’re kept in the dark, tormented and waiting for her story.
Alex is successful in business and friendships, yet has been let down in the cruellest of way by family. Then along comes Ryan, and everything changes. The chemistry is extreme,
“In the early morning, seeing Ryan standing there shirtless and his too long hair all mussed up, knowing it was my fingers that had done it, my blood was pumping.”
Yep, their developing relationship is just so beautifully written.
Rebecca Barber writes family and friend relationships that are as unique as the people who make them. She doesn’t define them, or put them into a box. And while this can be read as a stand-a-lone, this book is part of the McIntyre family, and as such, family are there, through and through.
As I read anything that she writes, I actually see the characters doing as described. She is a very descriptive writer, for example: “Reaching the empty kitchen, I stood at the sink, my fingers digging into the stainless steel as I stared down the plug hole pondering my life. I felt like I was spinning.” I’m with Ryan, wondering if he is ok. I see him and feel him as though I’m there, watching his world spin. She has an absolute gift of writing, and as such, I cannot give this book any less that 5 Stars.