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A carregar... Carrie Soto Is Back: A Novel (edição 2022)por Taylor Jenkins Reid (Autor)
Informação Sobre a ObraCarrie Soto Is Back por Taylor Jenkins Reid
![]() Books Read in 2023 (1,991) Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. https://www.instagram.com/p/Cw05U0bPPnp/ Taylor Jenkins Reid - Carrie Soto Is Back: I inhaled this too but also it’s not as nuanced (way more obvious where she’s headed) than say Daisy Jones. #cursorybookreviews #cursoryreviews I COULD NOT PUT IT DOWN once I sat down and just read this. This is why I love this author. She writes terrific female characters from different eras in various scenarios. 4.5 🌟Having lost her world title in tennis, the "Battle-Axe-Bitch" comes back to try to win it back. I inhaled this book in one day. I adored the relationship between Carrie and her father, Carrie and Bowe, and Carrie and Gwen. The way TJR wrote the tennis matches was heart-pumpingly fun and kept me turning those pages. I came to love Carrie and cheered her on not to win her title--but to find out who she really is. Another TJR WIN for me. Oct 2022--DNF Feb 2023--trying again bc so many good reviews. 4.75 bumped to 5 stars. Great book, dragged a bit in the middle with narration of many tennis matches. sem críticas | adicionar uma crítica
PrémiosDistinctions
"In this powerful novel about the cost of ambition and success, a legendary athlete attempts a comeback at an age when the world considers her past her prime-from the New York Times bestselling author of Malibu Rising. Carolina Soto is undeniably fierce. She is determined to be the best professional tennis player the world has ever seen. And by the time she retires from the game in 1989 at the age of thirty-one, she is just that: the best. She has shattered every record and claimed twenty Slam titles. And if you ask Carrie, she is entitled to every one of those victories. After all, her dad-a former champion tennis player himself-has trained her for this since the age of two, always emphasizing, "We don't stop for one second until you are the best." Which is why it is infuriating when Nicki Chan arrives on the scene six years later and ties Carrie with twenty Slams. Just like that, Carrie's championship record is slipping through her hands. And she can't let that happen. So at thirty-seven years old, Carrie Soto is coming out of retirement to defend her title. Even if the sports media says she's too old to be playing professionally. Even if her injured athlete's body doesn't move as fast as it once did. Even if it means trusting her father to coach her again after he betrayed her all those years ago. And even if the fans don't want the cold, heartless "Battle Axe" Carrie back. In spite of it all: Carrie. Is. Back. She will return for one final season to prove to the world that she is the all-time champion. Because if you know your destiny is to be the best, isn't it your right to keep fighting for it?"-- Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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![]() GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:![]()
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Carrie gets a very brief mention in Taylor Jenkins Reid's earlier book, Malibu Rising. Had I not been reading that book shortly after this one came out and recognizing the name in the title, I probably wouldn't have even put two and two together. But regardless, this book has a plot all its own. This was a decent book, though not my favorite of hers, and that surprised me a little because I really do enjoy tennis quite a bit and I felt like I would be able to relate to this one. The fact that Carrie Soto was such an unlikeable character probably had a lot to do with that, even though she redeemed herself somewhat by the end, as you might predict. Along that line, some of this book was predictable, and some was not. It was kind of fun to try to figure out if/when Carrie was going to win a particular tennis match. I could see where people not really into the sport may not like this novel as much as some of Reid's earlier ones, though I've also read quite a few reviews to the contrary. So I guess you'd have to judge for yourself. Taylor Jenkins Reid is still one of my favorite contemporary authors though, so I'll continue to probably read anything she writes. (