The Lost and Found Girl Published by HQN by Maisey Yates
on July 26, 2022
Genres: Contemporary, Women's Fiction, Chick-Lit
Pages: 400
Source: Netgalley
Format: ARC, eBook
Find the Author: Website, Twitter, Goodreads
Find the Book: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads
ISBN: 133550320X
Rating:
"Yates packs an emotional punch with this masterful, multilayered contemporary…pitch-perfect plotting and carefully crafted characters make for a story that’s sure to linger in readers’ minds.” —Publishers Weekly
New York Times bestselling author Maisey Yates dazzles with this powerful novel of sisterhood, secrets and how far you’d go to protect someone you love…
Ruby McKee is a miracle. Found abandoned on a bridge as a newborn baby by the McKee sisters, she’s become the unofficial mascot of Pear Blossom, Oregon, a symbol of hope in the wake of a devastating loss. Ruby has lived a charmed life, and when she returns home after traveling abroad, she’s expecting to settle into that charm. But an encounter with the town’s black sheep makes her question the truth about her mysterious past.
Dahlia McKee knows it’s not right to resent Ruby for being special. But uncovering the truth about Ruby’s origins could allow Dahlia to carve her own place in Pear Blossom history.
Recently widowed Lydia McKee has enough on her plate without taking on Ruby’s quest for answers. Especially when her husband’s best friend, Chase, is beginning to become a complication she doesn’t want or need.
Marianne Martin is glad her youngest sister is back in town, but it’s hard to support Ruby’s crusade when her own life is imploding.
When the quest for the truth about Ruby’s origins uncovers a devastating secret, will the McKee sisters fall apart or band together?
This book was a total surprise. A very pleasant surprise!
The story of a baby, Ruby, found on a bridge by three sisters–and that baby is now grown up and was adopted by the parents of the very sisters who found her.
This story was a great story of sisters and the complicated relationships between them all. And Ruby, even though she’s one of them, is a bit different.
But, really, the story is so much more complicated than that.
Each of the sisters has their own heartbreak, their own stories that draw them together. I did not see the curveball at the end. Because what I thought this book was–and what it turned out to be–are completely different.
Maisey Yates is a fantastic author who can definitely pull on the heartstrings.