
Making Amends
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Buy Now for £14.99
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Narrated by:
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Michelle Babb
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By:
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Melinda Clayton
About this listen
On a beautiful fall evening, in the middle of a game of hide-and-seek, five-year-old Bobby Clark is kidnapped by his estranged father, a shiftless man with a history of domestic violence and drug abuse. Bobby's twin brother Ricky watches, terrified, from his hiding place behind the bougainvillea, while mother Tabby, who also struggles with addiction, lies inebriated on the living room floor.
Bobby isn't seen by his loved ones again until a fateful morning 25 years later, when video of his arrest dominates the morning news. He has been charged with the murder of his father, but before the trial can begin, he manages to escape.
As Tabby and Ricky absorb the news of Bobby's return and subsequent escape, Tabby is convinced he'll come home to the quiet Florida street from which he was taken so long ago. But when events begin to spiral out of control, she's left to wonder: is a child born to be evil, or shaped to be evil? And in the end, when it's time to make amends, does it really matter?
©2015 Melinda Clayton (P)2016 Melinda ClaytonListener received this title free
A bit different
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Great family drama
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Brilliant suspense, thriller, a page turner
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This book is about the lives of two families intertwine around a tragic kidnapping, enduring the pain through the years in their own ways. Amazing
Amends
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Listener received this title free
In some ways it's not like other books as it resonated with me more than some. The next paragraph will talk about a minor plot point, consider it a spoiler but just be warned in case!
**Potential Spoiler** The resonating part for me was the characters of Ben and Vonn. Ben has Dementia. This felt like a sensitive topic to explore in a book without making it overly silly. People who have dealt with sufferers of this condition know that it's not easy, not for the person or the family around them. I tip my hat to the author, Melinda Clayton, for approaching the topic with real sensitivity. She gives us insight into Bens struggles. Moments of clarity, moments of living the past, and the struggle for Vonn to have to deal with this. For such a sensitive topic it was very well done and very real. I just wanted to highlight that. **End of Potential Spoiler*
With that out of the way, the story is very well paced, characters are given just the right amount of development to make us feel something, and it's an enjoyable story that slowly unfolds along the way.
Michelle, as narrator, does another fantastic job narrating this one and her tone and voice throughout match the tone and sensitivity of the book very well.
Very enjoyable listen and it's been a nice change of pace from my usual listens. I'd recommend it!
Well Paced, Unfolding Story
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a good story
narrator was ok
veered off at times but stuck to it.
a good read
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Packs a mean punch, unputdownable
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What is it like to go on living when you are only half of a whole? That is the dilemma facing Ricky and his mother Tabby. Ricky brother is kidnapped by an abusive father and is never seen again. That is until 25 years later they get a phone call telling them that Bobby has been arrested for killing his father and before they can go through the whole family reunion Bobby goes on the run. Will he had straight back to the family he lost? Or has that little lost boy gone for ever?
I really like the narrator she builds up the feeling of guilt and tension well until you find yourself sat on the edge of your seat.
I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.
Family drama
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This audiobook was given to me for free at my request and I provided this voluntary review.
Making Amends
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The story is told throughout in the first person but switches between the points of view of a mother, Tabby, her son Richie, and Von, her neighbour, employer and friend. Tabby had grown up in the dubious care of social services, meeting and becoming addicted to cocaine with the to-be-father when released to the world as an adult, but getting herself clean when she found she was pregnant. But after giving birth she started to drink, sometimes heavily. The couple split up and she looked after her twin boys alone until, when they were five, one of the boys, Bobby, was kidnapped by his father and never found.
All of this background is revealed in flashbacks and rememberances as the book commences twenty five years later when Tabby sees the rolling news report on T.V. that her long lost baby boy, Bobby, had been arrested for the murder of his father but without any details surrounding the how or the why. Although having been a good, and sober, mother to her remaining twin son, Richie, since Bobby was taken, she had never stopped longing for her stolen boy, nor forgiven herself for losing him.
Now he is found again, albeit in difficult circumstances, and his reappearance will change the carefully constructed lives of mother, son Richie, and her closest friend forever.
Making Amends is a powerfully written thriller, not fast paced action but instead a totally absorbing tale of guilt, introspection, fragility, and the ever present what-will-happen?. It is well constructed with three dimensional characters whose very real lives are made all the more so, as previously mentioned, by the excellent performance of the narrator. A perfect pairing of book and reader - and highly recommended.
Guilt is a powerful motivator
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