Reviews

Missing You by Kylie Kaden

shelleyrae's review against another edition

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4.0


"At what point did this become my fate? Did I ever control it? And if I'd chosen differently, would all the good parts dissolve along with the bad? Even if this is the end, I have no regrets. For giving into that magnetic pull we had, despite wanting different things....I didn't think it was possible to love another human more..."

Aisha and Ryan fell in love the moment they met, and were certain would make it work, despite the differences between them. Five years later, struggling with the reality of their compromises and the relentless demands of parenting their autistic spectrum son, they fight and Ryan walks away.
A day later, Aisha receives a late night phone call, and promising to return in an hour or so, leaves her son, Eli, in her father's care. Three days later Aisha has still not come home, Ryan can't be reached, and while the police seem inclined to dismiss Patrick's fears, he is certain something is wrong.

From the first page the reader is aware that wherever Aisha is, she is in trouble. The tension builds as the reader wonders why she is missing, has Aisha simply had enough, snapping under the strain, or is there a more sinister reason for her absence?

"I calmly wonder is this is how it feels to die: This strange lightness, drifting in zero gravity. I feel no pain, but I have no control. I command my brain to charge my limbs, to pry open my eyes, but it's no use."

Missing You unfolds through the perspectives of Aisha, Ryan and Patrick, shifting from the present, through the past, until the two timelines merge.

Over a period of seven days, Patrick worries about his missing daughter while caring for his grandson. Eli's behaviour is a challenge for Patrick and Kaden explores the difficulties of catering to his needs.

"Seventy years I've made it, and never seen a boy like him."

Aisha and Ryan's narratives reveal their life together - their passionate romance, their feelings about marriage and parenthood, - and why the cracks had begun to appear, leading to the fight that separates them the day before Aisha goes missing. Kaden does a wonderful job of creating two interesting, well rounded characters and mapping a fairytale relationship complicated by reality.

"My life isn't perfect, Gabe. We're broke, tired, antisocial. The highlight of my week is more than four hours' consecutive sleep. But we love each other. I love my son."

Missing You held me in its thrall from the first page, and while I confess to being a little disappointed in one element of the ending, I found it to be a layered, absorbing tale of love and suspense.

eclecticidentity's review against another edition

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1.0

Recieved another ARC from work. Maybe I'm just burnt out from reading the amount I have so far this year, but this really wasn't much of a thriller for me. I found it hard to stay interested. That doesn't mean you won't enjoy it but it just wasn't for me. There isn't anything more that I can say without spoiling the novel.
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