In a small cottage house in rural Ireland, Finley is forced to face a past she can’t outrun.
When Finley books her trip to the “Emerald Isle” as a foreign exchange student, she hopes to create a new identity and get some answers from God. After all, since her brother’s recent death, God seems to have forgotten she even exists.
Now all she wants to do is let her heart heal, see the sights in her brother’s favorite country, and work on her college audition piece for a prestigious music conservatory. She plans to use her brother’s journal from his time as Ireland as her guide, yet from the moment she boards the plane and sits next to Beckett Rush, teen star of the hottest vampire flicks, nothing goes according to her well-ordered plan.
The peace and beauty of the Irish village are no match for the chaos that soon becomes her life. When she gets roped into working as Beckett Rush’s personal assistant, she finds this famous wild child is not quite what he seems. And as she grows closer to the mysterious actor, her own secrets refuse to stay put.
As things begin to unravel, Finley takes desperate measures to control her own life and fill the empty spaces her brother left behind. When it all comes crashing down, Finley must discover how to give her past to God . . . if there’s to be any hope in her future.
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Sexual Content - 1/5
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Violence - 0/5
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Language - 1/5
1/5
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Drugs and Alcohol - 1/5
1/5
Summary
Reviewer Name: one well¬read chick Immediately I feel in love with There You’ll Find Me because of the rain boots on the cover. I know, I know don’t judge a book by its cover but I love rain boots. Good news for me though, I also love There You’ll Find Me, mostly for its awesome protagonist, Finley Sinclair. Finley is on her way to Ireland to find the end of her violin piece, a craving of a cross on a gravestone, and God. Her older brother Will adored Ireland and since Will is no longer alive to help Finley, Finley hopes that Ireland can help her get back her creativity so she can finish her violin piece before her auditions at the Manhattan Music Conservatory. She hopes that whatever this craving of a cross on a gravestone that inspired her older brother so much can also inspire her. But finding the cross that her brother sketched in his travel journal is easy, and for Finley there are so many distractions, an embittered old lady, a mental block, and Hollywood¬ bad boywho ¬doesn’t¬ seem so –bad¬and¬is¬also-socute Beckett Rush. Lucky for her Beckett Rush is happy to help her find this mysterious gravestone in exchange that she can be his assistant. This would be great if Finley actually liked Beckett but she is totally unfazed by his charm and rather indifferent to his movie star life. But as Finley tries to find her inspiration for the end of her violin piece she learns that sometimes people are much more then you think there are and God is not always where you think He should be