![]() ![]() They lived in an old trailer while they built their dream home. In 2015, Helen and Nate bought the land that Hattie had lived on. (This was the opening chapter, so not a spoiler.) She was right – three kids died and the townspeople hanged Hattie for it. In 1924, she warned people not to send their children to school because it was going to be burned down. In the early 20th century, Hattie was seen as a “witch” because she saw things before they happened. I’m rating it “ok”, but I feel like if my mind had been paying better attention at the moment it picked up, I “should” be rating it good. It’s kind of one of those things where it’s tempting to go back knowing what you know “now”, at the end of the book, to see how you had been led astray in your thinking. ![]() At first, the twist at the end confused me a bit, but it was explained. Even when it picked up, unfortunately, my mind was a bit elsewhere, but I did get my mind back on what I was reading after a bit. ![]() Far too tempting for the sometimes-art thief/forger! And things go very awry… When Roger meets him, he also discovers that he has a rare piece of artwork. When the former head of a tech company in Amsterdam comes to Norway, he is the perfect candidate for a big tech company in Oslo. She runs a small art gallery (that he paid for). He is married to Diana, but can’t really afford the lifestyle she wants. ![]() Roger Brown is a headhunter, pretty much the best. ![]()
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