
By telling a reporter that she lost her physic abilities to find missing people, Jessica thought she got thr FBI off her back, but it just made them follow her everywhere. This book is a tenn book and is the sequel to When Lighting Strikes. There’s almost a third party love interests thrown in here, but the way Cabot handles the whole thing is good in the realistic type of way so bravo there. For this book, I like his lack of presence. I do wonder if the book had ran its intended run (eight books) if Rob would’ve been in the later installments more and how that would’ve effected it. He’s probably, honestly, one of the least present Cabot male characters and I think that has an interesting effect on the books overall. He’s in the book just enough, but not enough to completely overwhelm the plot. And I really loved the Jess and Rob moments in this one too. It’s a little predictable, but it comes together nicely. I think out of all the series though, this installment has one of the most clean cut plots. This seems to be a disturbing pattern, huh? Book with lots and lots of faults but still fun. And it sort of contradicts the earlier book when Jess says that she bought some duets for her and Ruth to play (obviously, she could read music). I don’t see how anyone can possibly get into a Musical Festival (Band Camp) or into the top chairs without being able to you know…read music. I could bitch and get really nit picky about some of the music things in this book. I probably could shave off a star but I won't for now. Anyway, I am taking a quick break from the series before I read the third book. Of course, being twice her age now doesn't help matters-am I really that old, do not answer that. The pop culture references feel super dated now and Jess is extremely immature. Coronovirus Reread: Somehow this book has not held well up to the test of time.
