It had been so long, she couldn’t even remember all the violence she used to enact. “They’d crush skulls and blast… See, that was the thing. Although little does our heroine know just how weird their history is: She finds herself feeling connected to the mansion, although the three geriatric weirdo caretakers that come with it can be a bit much. When a job offer at a mysterious mansion comes through her bestie, she leaps at it, even though it’s in rural, wine-tasting country where she doesn’t know anyone. Casting about for what to do next, she temporarily moves into her parent’s place, only to discover they’ve become even more eccentric. The premise is simple: our heroine, Jacinta, has recently, somewhat relievedly, become divorced after sending her only son off to college. I have to get them from the Leukemia Fundraiser bucket). Almost as if I’ve been trapped in my house, unable to hit the vending machine at work for a Twix bar (I’m exaggerating the hospital would never put chocolate bars in it’s vending machines. It is the most satisfying CandyRead I’ve had in days, perhaps weeks. I really don’t think it’s QuarantineBrain™, but if you try and say it’s peri-menopause brain, I will come over and beat you with an old shoe. Read May 2020 Recommended for fans of Clean Sweep, PNR ★ ★ ★ ★ 1/2
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