Legacy - Nora Roberts
Jun. 30th, 2022 11:56
Author: Nora Roberts
Genre: Suspense
Rating: 4/5
# pages: Audiobook ~15hrs
Date read: June, 2022
Adrian Rizzo was seven when she met her father for the first time. That was the day he nearly killed her—before her mother, Lina, stepped in.
Soon after, Adrian was dropped off at her grandparents’ house in Maryland, where she spent a long summer drinking lemonade, playing with dogs, making a new best friend—and developing the stirrings of a crush on her friend’s ten-year-old brother. Lina, meanwhile, traveled the country promoting her fitness brand and turning it into a billion-dollar business. There was no point in dwelling on the past.
A decade later, Adrian has created her own line of yoga and workout videos, following in Lina’s footsteps but intent on maintaining creative control. And she’s just as cool-headed and ambitious as her mother. They aren’t close, but they’re cordial—as long as neither crosses the other.
But while Lina dismisses the death threats that Adrian starts getting as a routine part of her daughter’s growing celebrity, Adrian can’t help but find the vicious rhymes unsettling. Year after year, they keep arriving—the postmarks changing, but the menacing tone the same. They continue after she returns to Maryland and becomes reacquainted with Raylan, her childhood crush, all grown up and as gorgeously green-eyed as ever. Sometimes it even seems like the terrifying messages are indeed routine, like nothing will come of them. Until the murders start, and the escalation begins…
Nora Roberts writes ridiculously readable books. They're very formulaic, but I know that going into them, so it doesn't really bother me, and they pretty much always turn out to be proper pageturners (or whatever the audible equivalent would be).
This was no exception and I breezed through it, enjoying every minute. It's not her best work, but definitely not her worst either, and I liked all the characters. I loved reading about Adrian's life in Traveler's Creek and that Nora Roberts subscribes to the theory that generally speaking - people are nice! (with a few blatant exceptions, obviously). It makes for a very comfortable read.