Book
Title: Tattoos
Author:
Denise Mathew
Genre: Young
Adult / Coming of Age
Release
Date: December 11, 2013
Hosted
by: Book Enthusiast Promotions
"I was so sure it would be like The
Fault In Our Stars all over again (with a different twist of course). I was
ready for heartaches, tears and death.BUT I WAS SO WRONG.I was in for a big
surprise as the story took a different turn." Cha~Book Freak Blog
"This is a needle in a hay stack
kind of a book, I am so glad that I had the opportunity to read and review it
because it is the first book EVER to bring a tear to my eye, and I know that
that may seem weird as why would someone want to cry? But that is not how I
mean it, I mean that it was able to provoke such emotions in me that no other
book has been able to, and that is brilliant writing and story telling."
~Bookworm in Barrie Blog
"The characters were another
positive aspect of the story. I don't praise characters unless I really mean
it, and I definitely do in this one. Jax wasn't the cardboard cut-out bad boy;
his character was so fleshed out, and I really ended up loving his POV. And he
was such a good boyfriend! I loved him. Marilee was another wonderful
character, and I loved her POV just as much as Jax; maybe even a bit better.
Her character growth throughout the story is stunning. I am really glad this
was a two POV story, because it made Jax and Marilee so much more real. I have
to admit, I got really attached to Marilee and Jax."~My Full Bookshelf
Reviews
Seventeen-year-old Marilee Mackie has
everything going for her, beauty,money and a bright future. But when she's
diagnosed with Stage 3 Hodgkins Lymphoma her world falls apart. Instead of
finishing her senior year she begins the fight of her life.
Nineteen-year-old Jax, an enigmatic
hospital orderly, lives on the Strip, the proverbial other side of the tracks.
With his sleeves of tattoos and rocker look, he's the kind of bad boy that
Marilee has always steered clear of.
But when Marilee's cancer strips
everything that has defined her away, she searches for meaning in her life.
Seeing that Marilee has lost hope, Jax steps in and helps her find purpose, a
reason to live another day. From devastation the Peace Project is born.
With Marilee's money and Jax's knowledge
of the Strip, the teenagers embark on an unforgettable journey. Marilee learns
that happiness is a choice, small acts of kindness can change lives forever,
that a little good goes a long way, and that love can grow even in the darkest
places of your life. But more than anything she learns that rainbows can follow
storms.
The Peace Project is a story about love,
hope and the preconceived notions and barriers that we put between us for no
reason other than the way someone looks or where they live. It's about letting
go of all the things that we thought were important in the quest for our true
purpose. And that sometimes the people you never thought you could love, may be
exactly who you needed all along.
Most times I forgot or maybe even
ignored how Jax felt, or the fact that someday I might leave him forever, and
there wouldn’t be a thing he could do about it. The actuality of my illness and
how it affected him had only briefly entered my thoughts in the past. But now,
with his seemingly harmless comment about Cindy, it brought everything into
stark reality.
“And what do you see when you look at
me?” I asked, locking my eyes onto his. Jax kept his gaze focused on a spot on
the foot of the bed, as if deciding what he would say. Witnessing that he was
lost for a response made me want to take back the question. But I couldn’t,
because my cancer was like a massive presence in the room, always there with
us. Up until then we had managed to ignore it, not now though.
After what seemed painfully long but
was only a few minutes, Jax brought his focus back to my face. He cradled my
cheeks in his huge hands. His touch was gentle as if he was worried he might
shatter me. His blue eyes met mine for a moment. I saw the discomfort that I
had put there with my question. I was more than sorry that I had been so
stupid. Jax didn’t deserve to be put on the spot or to be reminded so cruelly
about my illness.
“I see someone who is both beautiful
inside and out. I see someone who has grown because of their illness, become a
better person and who instead of being bitter like you have every right to be,
has become somehow better. Instead of pitying yourself you’re trying to make a
difference in the world, and leave it better for you having been here. I see
you in every flower in the park, every color in a rainbow and in every scent
that reminds me of the things I love. Without knowing how, or even why it
happened, I can’t imagine a world where you don’t exist. And even when I’m away
I’m still with you, with every thought of you and how you feel in my arms,
against my chest, the smoothness of your skin…”
He tapped his head. “You’re always
there with me and no matter what happens in the future you’ll be there, safe in
my mind with spaghetti and meatballs, my beat up bike, my Gran and my Celtics
t-shirt, and all the rest of the things I love.”
He closed his eyes and sighed. A wave
of peacefulness rippled across his face making him look both boyish and
innocent.
I felt tears roll down my cheeks, but
I didn’t bother to try to stop them or brush them away. I wanted Jax to know
how much he had moved me. I wanted him to see how amazing it felt to know that
he cared as much as he did. If there had been any doubt in my mind before that
I loved him, there was none now. The one regret that came after Jax’s brutal
honesty was that I had lied to him about Thanksgiving.
When he opened his eyes again they
shimmered with unshed tears. He evidently had had enough practice hiding his
emotions that he was able to rein everything in before he actually let them
spill. I leaned in to him, covering his mouth with mine. He tasted of
peppermint gum, and the stubble on his chin tickled my skin. Just like he had
told me he did, I took mental snapshots of him, images that would get me
through the times when he was away from me.
Jax stroked the length of my neck,
down my shoulder and let his hand rest on the curve of my hip. His lips moved
along the line of my jaw, his tongue tracing the bones. I gasped, because the
action made me want things that I hadn’t really put much thought into before
then. Like making love for the first time. If and when that ever happened, I
knew my first time could only be with Jax.
Denise Mathew loves good chocolate, lots of coffee, her kids
and husband, when they behave, and of course writing stories. She believes that
housework should be banned and wishes that potato chips were the most healthy
and nutritious food on the planet. She worked as a pediatric nurse for eleven
years, once owned an online jewelry business and even taught English in
Thailand. She plans on writing until the stories run out, something she hopes
never happens.
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Tattoos-A-Novel-Denise-Mathew-ebook/dp/B00FG4GQHQ/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1391541777&sr=8-1&keywords=Tattoos+a+novel
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