Never Have I Ever

Date: February 28, 2025

Author: Joshilyn Jackson

Genre: domestic suspense, psychological thriller

I’m confused. I’m just past the 100-page-college-try and I don’t understand how in the pivotal scene that’s to set the tone for the remainder of the story, that Amy, (the main character), could be tricked into thinking the new, edgy neighbor, Roux, could be the little-girl-all-grown-up-now from the horrific accident that changed Amy’s life so many years ago?  The accident Amy no longer talks about?

As a young, drunk, and high teenager, Amy had been involved in a terrible wreck that took the life of a little girl’s mom. The big secret was that Amy believes she was actually the one that had been driving, yet she let her best friend take the fall and serve what was rightfully her time.  

Needless to say, Amy was thrown off, way  off, with Roux’s story. Could she truly be that little girl? All grown up now?

Fast forward to a few scenes later when Amy confronts Roux, calling her bluff, stating she knew Roux couldn’t be that little girl from the accident because Amy knew for a fact that little girl died as a child.

So, now, how could the grown-up version exist if the child version died? How could Amy have been so bamboozled as to believe for even a second this woman could have been an eyewitness to Amy’s guilt? Freaking out and admitting to said guilt while Roux secretly recorded the confession for blackmailing reasons?

Apparently, Roux found out about Amy’s smallish inheritance by happenstance through a lawyer in another totally different city and began cooking up a con. A pretty elaborate con for such a small amount of payoff.

The plot had too many holes, so I must pass.

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