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320 pages, Paperback
First published March 10, 2015
“How can a fifteen year-old-girl defend her love when that love is dismissed by everyone?”
“They are the past and this is the present, and Auburn is… somehow both. She would be shocked if she knew how much of her past has affected my present, which is why I won’t be sharing the truth with her. Some secrets should never turn into confessions.”
“I’m losing track of the lies I’m telling her, and lying to someone like her isn’t normally something I would do. But I don’t know how to tell her the truth…
I’ve never felt stronger than I feel when I’m with her. I’ve never felt like I had a purpose like I feel when I’m with her. I think about the first words I said to her when she showed up at my door. “Are you here to save me?”
“The more we kiss, the more we realize what we’re losing…He pulls back and looks me in the eyes with a pained expression. He moves his hand from the back of my head and brings it to my cheek, brushing a thumb over my bottom lip. “This already hurts.”
When he feels my tears falling against his chest, he doesn’t do anything to stop them. Instead, he simply holds me with a much tighter grip and presses his cheek against the top of my head…”I know, baby,” he whispers. “I know.”
Hopefully,she has more than one fate,Owen.
I'm afraid if I listen to my heart once,I'll never figure out how to ignore it again.
There are people you meet that you get to know,and then there are people you meet that you already know.
I’ll love you forever.Even when I can’t.
“I suck at cutting hair. I hate listening to everyone’s problems while they sit in the salon chair. I swear, people take so many things for granted, and hearing all their whiny stories puts me in such a bad mood.”
“There are a few really good clients. People I look forward to. I think it’s not so much the people that I don’t like, but the fact that I had to choose something I didn’t want to do.”
I love that answer. I’m also jealous of it, because I wish I could have been born with a natural talent. Something that would have chosen me, so that I wouldn’t have to cut hair all day.
“There are people you meet that you get to know, and then there are people you meet that you already know.”
"I’m pretty sure you just made determination my favorite quality in a person.”
A new release from CoHo always attracts a HUGE amount of interest and deservedly so. She’s a quality author with a large following, she’s very adept at social media (possibly the best), she’s funny and engaging and as such garners many auto 5 star reviews especially from the pre-release reviewers with ARCs which gush like crazy and extoll the book’s virtues and, having noticed this before, I raised a cynical eyebrow and vowed to read Confess with a highly critical eye and truly assess it on its merits before reviewing. In truth, I’m looking for fault. So, as soon as the book downloaded to my Kindle I decided to adopt a total immersion technique, avoiding Goodreads and those stellar reviews like the plague, and plunged in head first without even reading the blurb to form my own opinions.
So, having decided to look for fault, I have to confess (get it????) that I actually found very little. Possibly the story dragged a little at around the 60% mark and maybe the H and h didn’t get quite enough page time together as I would have liked but that was pretty much it and I think the conclusion to my experiment would be that she really does deserve all those rave reviews. She’s right at the top of the new adult contemporary romance category, the undefeated champion of the genre and, even though there are plenty of pretenders for her crown, she ain’t going nowhere!
And so I began. By 3% I was bawling my eyes out (rather like watching Pixar’s Up), by 15% I had the warm and fuzzies and was grinning like a loon into my Kindle, by 55% I was in the depths of despair and at 100% I sighed contentedly. Job well done, CoHo. I bought this on release day and had finished it by the evening – it completely held my attention as I pretty much lost a whole day to this story.
In a Colleen Hoover novel there’s always a ‘thing’. In Confess the 'thing' is art and our hero is Owen Mason Gentry (OMG) and he’s an artist whose work is inspired by confessions that are posted through his studio door.
Every day I’m grateful that my husband and his brother look exactly alike. It means there’s less of a chance that my husband will find out that our son isn’t his.
The confessions were brilliant – sometimes funny, sometimes sad, sometime shocking but it’s a truly original idea for a novel.
I haven’t spoken to my children in four months. They’ll call on holidays and my birthday, but never in between. I don’t blame them. I was a horrible father.
Auburn replies to his ‘Help Wanted’ sign on the door and this is how they meet although it’s obvious to us and Owen that he knows who she is but Auburn is oblivious to this. I found myself instantly intrigued and dying to know what had happened in those intervening years between the prologue and now to bring us to the mysterious yet completely random meeting. By this point in the story, I was completely on board, totally hooked. As the story continues, there’s such a stark contrast between the innocence of the young love of the prologue and the desperate situations both Auburn and Owen find themselves in, all due to the actions of others. These two find themselves falling desperately in love and also realise that their being together would be the best yet worst thing that could happen to them. They REALLY can’t be together – I am aware that that’s a highly common dilemma in new adult romance but the author works her magic here and puts a truly original spin on this and it’s completely believable and engrossing.
There’s a lot of secrets here, possibly truths as yet untold, and plenty of confessions will be required to get us towards the end of the story. There appeared to be one glaring omission, one little fact not yet explained as we near the end of the book and I fretted, just a little, but I needn’t have worried – you can have faith in CoHo because she really does bring you full circle and everything is explained by the end of the book. Hence the aforementioned contented sigh!
The pace of the story is gentle rather than slow which gives lots of time for the expansion of the growing affection of the two central characters and for us to become fully involved in this story which appears to hurtle from one disaster to the next although Colleen keeps everything grounded with strong character development and profound emotional depth. I felt every emotion with the characters, experiencing every high and low with them and was completely engrossed. It’s a story that captured my interest from the very first page, kept me involved the whole way through and I found myself 100% emotionally invested. The book had an almost magnetic pull on it - whenever I put it down, I soon found myself back, dying to continue. Absolutely gripping stuff!
Reading a Colleen Hoover novel, to me, is rather like sinking into your favourite arm-chair after a hellish day at the office, kicking off those heels that have pinched all day and indulging in a glass of very expensive wine. It’s exquisitely comforting and it feels like coming home. I know I’m going to get a hero I will adore and a heroine I can identify with and that’s exactly what we found here. Heartbreakingly beautiful and achingly real, Confess is a wholly engrossing tale of two young people with many hurdles to overcome finding a love that is truly worth fighting for.
4.5 OMG stars
Owen’s paintings is based on a real artist – check out his beautiful work here