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Shelter in Place Kindle Edition
From Nora Roberts comes the #1 New York Times bestseller Shelter in Place (June 2018)—a powerful tale of heart, heroism...and propulsive suspense.
It was a typical evening at a mall outside Portland, Maine. Three teenage friends waited for the movie to start. A boy flirted with the girl selling sunglasses. Mothers and children shopped together, and the manager at video game store tended to customers. Then the shooters arrived.
The chaos and carnage lasted only eight minutes before the killers were taken down. But for those who lived through it, the effects would last forever. In the years that followed, one would dedicate himself to a law enforcement career. Another would close herself off, trying to bury the memory of huddling in a ladies' room, helplessly clutching her cell phone--until she finally found a way to pour her emotions into her art.
But one person wasn't satisfied with the shockingly high death toll at the DownEast Mall. And as the survivors slowly heal, find shelter, and rebuild, they will discover that another conspirator is lying in wait--and this time, there might be nowhere safe to hide.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Roberts' newest is part thriller, part romance, part survivors' psychological study with a touch of New Age magic―and a lively, captivating read." - Kirkus
"Roberts lets the sharply outlined characters, including an unusual villain, take center stage in another tautly plotted page-turner that suspense and thriller readers will love." - Library Journal
"Roberts’ latest polished novel delivers all the literary touchstones her fans have come to expect, including high-stakes suspense, a generous dollop of romance, a thoughtful exploration of the strong bonds of family and friendship that women create for themselves." - Booklist
“[The] real draw is the story, which has some welcome red herrings and a page-turning brio that elevates it above the average thriller.” - Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Nora Roberts is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of more than 200 novels, including Year One, Come Sundown, The Obsession, The Liar, and many more. She is also the author of the bestselling In Death series written under the pen name J.D. Robb. There are more than 500 million copies of her books in print. She lives in Maryland.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Shelter In Place
By Nora RobertsSt. Martin's Press
Copyright © 2018 Nora RobertsAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-250-16159-8
Contents
Title Page,Copyright Notice,
Dedication,
Part One: Innocence Lost,
Chapter One,
Also by Nora Roberts,
About the Author,
Copyright,
CHAPTER 1
On Friday, July 22, 2005, Simone Knox ordered a large Fanta — orange — to go with her popcorn and Swedish Fish. The choice, her standard night-at-the-movies fare, changed her life, and very likely saved it. Still, she'd never drink Fanta again.
But at that moment she only wanted to settle down in the theater with her two best friends forEVER and lose herself in the dark.
Because her life — currently and absolutely for the rest of the summer, and maybe for all time — sucked beyond infinity.
The boy she loved, the boy she'd dated exclusively for seven months, two weeks, and four days, the boy she'd imagined cruising through her upcoming senior year with — hand in hand, heart to heart — had dumped her.
In a text.
done wasting time cuz i got 2 b with somebody ready to b all the way with me and thats not u so we r done c u
Certain he couldn't have meant it, she'd tried to call him — but he didn't answer. She'd texted three times, humiliating herself.
Then she'd gone to his MySpace page. Humiliation was too weak a word for what she suffered.
Traded in the old DEFECTIVE model for a hot new one.
Simone out!
Tiffany in!
Shook off a LOSER and I'll be rolling through the summer and into senior year with the hottest girl in the class of 2006.
His post — with pictures — had already generated comments. She might've been smart enough to know he'd ordered his friends to say mean, ugly things about her, but that didn't lessen the sting or the embarrassment.
She grieved for days. She wallowed in the comfort and righteous anger of her two closest friends. She raged at her younger sister's taunts, dragged herself to her summer job and the weekly tennis lessons at the club that her mother insisted on.
A text from her grandmother made her sniffle. CiCi might be meditating with the Dalai Lama in Tibet, rocking it out with the Stones in London, or painting in her studio on Tranquility Island, but she had a way of finding out anything and everything.
It hurts now, and the pain's real, so hugs, my treasure. But give it a few weeks, and you'll realize he's just another asshole. Kick butt and namaste.
Simone didn't think Trent was an asshole (though both Tish and Mi agreed with CiCi). Maybe he'd tossed her aside — and in a really mean way — just because she wouldn't do it with him. She just wasn't ready to do it. Besides, Tish had done it with her ex-boyfriend after the junior prom — and twice more — and he'd dumped her anyway.
The worst was, she still loved Trent and, in her desperate sixteen-year-old heart, knew she'd never love anyone else, ever again. Even though she'd torn out the pages of her journal where she'd written her future names — Mrs. Trent Woolworth, Simone Knox-Woolworth, S. K. Woolworth — ripped them to shreds, then burned them, along with every photo she had of him, in the patio firepit during a girl-power ceremony with her friends, she still loved him.
But, as Mi pointed out, she had to live, even though part of her just wanted to die, so she let her friends drag her to the movies.
Anyway, she was tired of sulking in her room, and she really didn't want to slump around the mall with her mother and little sister, so the movies won. Mi won, too, as it was her turn to pick, so Simone was stuck with some science-fiction deal called The Island Mi was crazy to see.
Tish didn't mind the pick. As a future actress, she felt that experiencing movies and plays was both a duty and pre-career training. Plus Ewan McGregor ranked in Tish's top five movie boyfriends.
"Let's get seats. I want good ones." Mi, small, compact, with dark, dramatic eyes and a thick wedge of black hair, gathered her popcorn — no fake butter — her drink, and the peanut M&M's she favored.
Mi had turned seventeen in May, dated sporadically, as she currently preferred science to boys, and skimmed just above the nerd line only because of her prowess as a gymnast and solid slot on the cheerleading squad.
A squad unfortunately captained by one Tiffany Bryce, boyfriend stealer and slut.
"I need the ladies'." Tish — double-fake-butter popcorn, a Coke, and Junior Mints — pushed her snacks at her friends. "I'll find you."
"Don't fool around with your face and hair," Mi warned her. "Nobody can see them anyway, once the movie starts."
And she was already perfect, Simone thought as she juggled Tish's popcorn on the way to one of the three theaters in the DownEast Mall Cineplex.
Tish had long, smooth, silky chestnut-brown hair — with professional golden highlights because her mother wasn't stuck in nineteen-fifty-whatever. Her face — Simone loved studying faces — a classic oval, added flirty charm with dimples; and the dimples flirted often, as Tish always found something to smile about. Simone figured she'd smile a lot, too, if she'd turned out tall and curvy, with bright blue eyes and dimples.
On top of everything, Tish's parents totally supported her ambition to pursue acting. She'd hit the jackpot in Simone's mind. Looks, personality, brains, and parents who actually had a clue.
But Simone loved Tish anyway.
The three of them already had plans — secret ones for now because Simone's parents completely did not have a clue — to spend the summer after graduation in New York.
Maybe they'd even move there — it had to be more exciting than Rockpoint, Maine.
Simone figured a sand dune in the Sahara had to be more exciting than Rockpoint, Maine.
But New York? Bright lights, hordes of people.
Freedom!
Mi could study to be a doctor at Columbia, Tish could study acting and go on auditions. And she ... could study something.
Something that wasn't law, as her own clueless parents wanted. Not surprising, and so lame and clichéd because her father was a big-shot lawyer.
Ward Knox would be disappointed, but that's how it had to be.
Maybe she'd study art and become a famous artist like CiCi. That would freak her parents out awesomely. And, like CiCi, she'd take and discard lovers at her whim. (When she was ready to do it).
That would show Trent Woolworth.
"Come out," Mi ordered, giving her an elbow bump.
"What? I'm right here."
"No, you're in the Simone Brood Zone. Come out, join the world."
Maybe she liked it in the SBZ, but ... "I have to open the door with the power of my mind because my hands are full. Okay, done. I'm back."
"The mind of Simone Knox is an awesome thing to behold."
"I must use it for good, and not use it to melt Tiffany into a puddle of slut goo."
"You don't have to anyway. Her brain's already a puddle of slut goo."
Friends, Simone thought, always knew the right thing to say. She would rejoin the world with Mi — and Tish, whenever Tish stopped playing with her already-perfect face and hair and came out — and leave the SBZ behind.
A Friday night opening meant she walked into a theater already half-full. Mi grabbed three seats dead center, took the third one in from the aisle so Simone — still heart tender — could take the one between her and Tish, whose longer legs earned the aisle seat.
Mi shifted in her seat. She'd already calculated they had six minutes until the lights dimmed.
"You've got to go to Allie's party tomorrow night."
The SBZ beckoned. "I'm not ready for a party, and you know Trent's going to be there with that slut-goo-brain Tiffany."
"That's the point, Sim. If you don't go, everybody's going to think you're, like, hiding out, that you're not over him."
"I am, and I'm not."
"The point," Mi insisted. "You don't give him the satisfaction. You go with us — Tish is going with Scott, but he's cool — and you wear something amazing, let Tish do your makeup because she's got the skills. And you act like: Who, what, him? You know, you're so over that. You make a statement."
Simone felt the SBZ pulling her. "I don't think I can face it. Tish is the actress, not me."
"You played Rizzo in Grease for the spring musical. Tish was awesome as Sandy, but you were an equally awesome Rizzo."
"Because I've had dance lessons and can sing a little."
"You sing great — and you did great. Be Rizzo at Allie's party, you know, all confident and sexy and up yours."
"I don't know, Mi." But she could, sort of, imagine it. And how Trent, seeing her all confident and sexy and up yours, would want her again.
Then Tish rushed in, dropped down, gripped Simone's hand. "You're not going to freak."
"Why would I ... Oh no. Please!"
"The slut's putting on fresh lip gloss, and the creep's hanging outside the ladies' like a good dog."
"Crap." Mi curled her fingers around Simone's arm. "Maybe they're going to one of the other movies."
"No, they're coming here, because that's what my life is."
Mi tightened her grip. "Don't even think about leaving. He'd see you and you'd look and feel like a loser. You're not a loser. This is your dress rehearsal for Allie's party."
"She's going?" Tish's dimples flashed and flickered. "You talked her into it?"
"We're working on it. Just sit." Mi angled herself just enough. "You're right, they're coming in. Just stay," she hissed as Simone's arm trembled under her hand. "You don't even notice them. We're right here."
"Right here, now and forever," Tish echoed, giving Simone's hand a squeeze. "We're a ... a wall of disdain. Got it?"
They walked by, the blonde with the tumble of curls and snugly cropped jeans, and the golden boy — tall, so handsome, quarterback of the championship Wildcats.
Trent gave Simone the slow smile that had once melted her heart, and deliberately ran a hand down Tiffany's back, letting it slide to her butt and linger there.
Tiffany turned her head as Trent whispered in her ear and looked over her shoulder. Smirked with her perfect, freshly glossed lips.
Brokenhearted, her life a Trent-less void, Simone still had too much of her grandmother in her to take that kind of insult.
She smirked right back and shot up her middle finger.
Mi let out a snorting giggle. "Way to go, Rizzo."
Though Simone's broken heart thudded, she made herself watch as Trent and Tiffany sat three rows ahead, and immediately began to make out.
"All men want sex," Tish said wisely. "I mean, why wouldn't they? But when that's all they want, they're not worth it."
"We're better than she is." Mi passed Tish her Junior Mints and Coke. "Because that's all she's got."
"You're right." Maybe her eyes stung a little, but there was a burning inside her heart, and the burn felt like healing. She handed Tish her popcorn. "I'm going to Allie's party."
Tish let out a laugh — deliberately mocking and loud. Enough to make Tiffany jerk. Tish shot Simone a grin. "We'll rule that party."
Simone clamped her popcorn between her thighs so she could link hands with her friends. "I love you guys."
By the time the previews ended Simone had stopped watching the silhouettes three rows down. Mostly. She'd expected to brood through the movie — actually planned on it — but found herself caught up. Ewan McGregor was dreamy, and she liked how strong and brave Scarlett Johansson came across.
But fifteen minutes in, she realized she should've gone to the bathroom with Tish — though that would've been a disaster with lip-gloss Tiffany in there — or she should've taken it a lot easier on the Fanta.
Twenty minutes in, she gave up. "I've gotta pee," she whispered.
"Come on!" Mi whispered back.
"I'll be fast."
"You want me to go with you?"
She shook her head at Tish, gave her what was left of the popcorn and Fanta to hold.
She shuffled by, strode quickly up the aisle. After making the turn to the right, she hurried to the ladies', shoved the door open.
Empty, no waiting. Relieved, she grabbed a stall, and contemplated as she emptied her bladder.
She'd handled the situation. Maybe CiCi had been right. Maybe she was close to realizing Trent was an asshole.
But he was so, so cute, and he had that smile, and —
"Doesn't matter," she muttered. "Assholes can be cute."
Still, she thought about it as she washed her hands, as she studied herself in the mirror over the sink.
She didn't have Tiffany's long blond curls or bold blue eyes or killer bod. She was, as far as she could tell, just average.
Average brown hair her mother wouldn't let her have highlighted. Just wait until she hit eighteen and could do whatever she wanted with her own hair. She wished she hadn't worn it in a ponytail tonight, because it suddenly made her feel juvenile. Maybe she'd cut it. Spike and punk it up. Maybe.
Her mouth was too wide, even if Tish said it was sexy, like Julia Roberts.
Brown eyes, but not deep and dramatic like Mi's. Just brown, like her stupid hair. Of course Tish, being Tish, said they were amber.
But that was just a fancy word for brown.
That didn't matter, either. Maybe she was average, but she wasn't fake. Like Tiffany, whose hair was brown, too, under the bleach.
"I'm not a fake," she said to the mirror. "And Trent Woolworth's an asshole. Tiffany Bryce is a slut-bitch. They can both go to hell."
With a decisive nod, she held her head high and walked out of the bathroom.
She thought the loud pops — firecrackers? — and the screams were from the movie. Cursing herself for stalling and missing an important scene, she quickened her pace.
As she neared the theater door, it burst open. The man, eyes wild, took one stumbling step before he fell forward.
Blood — was that blood? His hands clawed at the green carpet — the carpet where red spread — then stilled.
Flashes, she saw flashes through the door that was wedged open a few inches by the man's legs. Blasts and blasts, screams. And people, shadows and silhouettes, falling, running, falling.
And the figure, dark in the dark, walking methodically up the rows.
She watched, frozen, as that figure turned and shot a woman in the back who was running.
She couldn't breathe. If she'd been capable of drawing a breath, it would've expelled in a scream.
Part of her brain rejected what she'd seen. It couldn't be real. It had to be like the movie. Just pretend. But instinct kicked in, had her running back to the bathroom, crouching behind the door.
Her hands didn't want to work, fumbled on her purse, fumbled on her phone.
Her father had insisted on nine-one-one as her first memory code on the phone.
Her vision wavered, and her breath came now, came in ragged pants.
"Nine-one-one. What is your emergency?"
"He's killing them. He's killing them. Help! My friends. Oh God, oh God. He's shooting people."
* * *
Reed Quartermaine hated working weekends. He wasn't crazy about working in the mall, either, but he wanted to go back to college in the fall. And college included this little detail they called tuition. Add in books, housing, food, and you had to work weekends at the mall.
His parents covered most of the freight, but they couldn't manage it all. Not with his sister heading off in another year, and his brother already three years in at American University in D.C.
He sure as hell didn't want to wait tables the rest of his life, so college. And maybe before he donned another cap and gown he would figure out just what the hell he did want to do for the rest of his life.
But summers, he waited tables, and tried to look on the bright side. The restaurant's mall location worked okay, and the tips didn't suck. Maybe waiting tables at Mangia five nights a week with a double shift on Saturdays killed his social life, but he ate well.
Bowls of pasta, loaded pizzas, hunks of Mangia's renowned tiramisu hadn't put much meat on his long, bony frame, but it wasn't for lack of trying.
His father once had hope his middle child would follow in his football-star cleat-prints, as his oldest son had — resoundingly. But Reed's complete lack of skill on the field and skinny frame dashed those hopes. Still, standing on a yard of leg by the time he'd hit sixteen, with a willingness to run all damn day, had made him a minor sort of star on varsity track, so that balanced it out some.
Then his sister took the heat off with her fierce talent on the soccer field.
He served a table of four their starters — insalata mista for the mother, gnocchi for the dad, mozzarella sticks for the boy, and fried ravioli for the girl. He flirted harmlessly with the girl, who gave him long, shy smiles. Harmless because he figured she was maybe fourteen and off the radar for a college man heading into his sophomore year.
Reed knew how to flirt harmlessly with young girls, older women, and pretty much all in between. Tips mattered, and he'd honed the charm for customers after four summers of waiting tables.
He covered his section — families, some old couples, a scatter of date-night thirty-whatevers. Probably dinner and a movie, which made him think he'd see if Chaz — assistant manager at GameStop — wanted to catch the late showing of The Island after their shifts.
He ran credit cards — chatting up table three had bagged him a solid twenty percent — turned tables, swung in and out of the insane kitchen, and finally hit break time.
"Dory, taking my ten."
The head waitress gave his section a quick scan, gave him the nod.
(Continues...)Excerpted from Shelter In Place by Nora Roberts. Copyright © 2018 Nora Roberts. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : B076BGDMK9
- Publisher : St. Martin's Press (May 29, 2018)
- Publication date : May 29, 2018
- Language : English
- File size : 5.3 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 445 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #35,456 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #250 in Small Town Romance (Books)
- #1,091 in Contemporary Women's Fiction
- #1,236 in Women's Domestic Life Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Nora Roberts is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of more than 200 novels, including Shelter in Place, Year One, Come Sundown, and many more. She is also the author of the bestselling In Death series written under the pen name J.D. Robb. There are more than five hundred million copies of her books in print.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this novel well-written with rich characters who evolve emotionally throughout the story, and appreciate its artistic elements and vivid descriptions. The book is suspenseful, with one customer noting its remarkable plot turnaround, and customers say it will make them laugh and cry. While the pacing receives mixed reactions, with some finding it fast-paced while others note a slow beginning, the emotional content is considered heart-wrenching.
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Customers love the story of this book, describing it as well-written and fun to read, with one customer noting it's a beautiful nonpreachy narrative.
"Excellent read. Hard to put down. I love her light mystery- romance books." Read more
"...This was a riveting story that kept me up waaaay too late at night, because I just could not put it down...." Read more
"Shelter in Place by Nora Roberts is worth reading. It has a hard subject matter but well worth the time to read and then let settle...." Read more
"The book was fantastic. It was very interesting and difficult to read because of the content, it made me laugh and cry and smile...." Read more
Customers find the book suspenseful and exciting, describing it as an amazing story about a tragic event, with one customer noting how it kept them glued to the page as it progressed.
"...The person was a huge surprise for me. It was interesting and a bit scary to read as the intelligent, lonely teen grows and exacts revenge...." Read more
"Excellent read. Hard to put down. I love her light mystery- romance books." Read more
"...There is a very poignant scene near the end that provides catharsis and closure for Leed, Simone, and the other survivors...." Read more
"...The plot was excellent suspense, and I worried for so many of the characters. The romance didn’t begin till halfway, but went nicely from there...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, noting that the characters are rich and evolve throughout the story, with one customer mentioning how they felt every emotion as they progressed.
"...The primary characters live up to NR's usual standards. They are likable and from the first or second chapter I was hoping they would be the main '..." Read more
"I wish her books did not end as I love the characters and I don’t want to leave them. Write more !!" Read more
"Another hit for me. Very hard to put down. The characters are what make it (as usual), and what elevate Ms. Roberts to magnificent in her writing...." Read more
"...The characters were very complex, had a lot of depth that I wasn’t really expecting. I loved Reed and Cici so much...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its spellbinding and evocative nature that brings scenes to life, while also appreciating the author's masterful dialogue and compassionate approach.
"...only given a few pages at different parts in the book, but she is well written with none of the platitudes so often regulated to geriatric females..." Read more
"This book reminded me of Obsession and Identity though not as good. With those books I was absorbed in the story This one I was along for the ride...." Read more
"...There are some long philosophical conversations, as well as, some medium hot sex, but the verbiage is more normal, every day talk without the long-..." Read more
"...are what make it (as usual), and what elevate Ms. Roberts to magnificent in her writing...." Read more
Customers appreciate the artistic elements in the book, noting how it paints vivid pictures and is set in beautiful settings, with one customer highlighting the attention to sculpting details.
"...The amount of thought and detail that went into every single aspect of this book is mind-blowing...." Read more
"...There is a visual element to her work, which I always enjoy, and she has a talent for creating authentic-feeling connections between her characters,..." Read more
"...hero/heroine, their families/communities, and lots of stuff about home decoration...." Read more
"...I was invested in the characters and their story. They were drawn with care, quirky yet believable. And, thank goodness, no similar names!..." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's humor and find it entertaining, with many noting it made them both laugh and cry.
"...interesting and difficult to read because of the content, it made me laugh and cry and smile. Thank you very much for sharing your world with us." Read more
"...Taut, thrilling, poetic, humorous, yet dark. The story gripped me from the first page...." Read more
"...Twists and turns, drama, suspense, laughter and tears. It has it all. Thank you for not just another romance...." Read more
"...Great story line and characters that feel real. Definitely an entertaining and captivating read." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the book's emotional content, with some finding it heart wrenching and making them cry, while others find it emotionally draining.
"...The love affair is both tender and passionate, with each bringing something to the relationship that completes the other...." Read more
"...Yet, in Shelter in Place, I was struck by the darkness and hopeless feeling I had, as I read Nora’s very real description of the mass shooting in a..." Read more
"...Pulls you in from the very beginning! Heart wrenching and the characters are believable" Read more
"...I liked the town, I loved the place. The book was emotionally wrenching, I am glad I read it." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some appreciating how quickly the story moves and finding it timely, while others note a slow beginning.
"...When I opened this book I was immediately immersed into the town, the island, the culture, the personalities and the hearts of each character...." Read more
"...What terrified me is that unshakeable feeling that even if these perpetrators have been caught or are dead, I may never feel safe again...." Read more
"Never was a book more needed than Sheltering in Place. Both timely and appropriate, it covers a mass murder at a shopping mall and the aftermath...." Read more
"...Also the subject matter was grim but handled in the appropriate manner and unfortunately this is the world we live in and this is a possible real..." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2018Much better than I had expected given the title. I applaud Ms. Roberts restraint in writing about this timely subject and keeping it apolitical. She let the reader follow/feel the story as tragedy strikes. The majority of the book is how the people involved, both protagonists and antagonist, move on from that one night.
The primary characters live up to NR's usual standards. They are likable and from the first or second chapter I was hoping they would be the main 'pairing'. She uses restraint in keeping them apart during at least the first half of the book. One is 16 and the other about 20 when the shootings occur, so Roberts takes them in different directions so they mature, and try to deal with what happened on that Friday night at a mall in Portland, Maine. It isn't until they are adults with some sense of self that she allows them to meet.
I have read all of NR's "In Death" books and don't think she has written a better primary, 'bad guy'. The person was a huge surprise for me. It was interesting and a bit scary to read as the intelligent, lonely teen grows and exacts revenge. I appreciate that this is a book that would fall under the romance category and lacked the really gristly sections often found in the straight murder mystery category that I am fond of.
I've noticed that as Roberts ages, she is writing better and more interesting elderly characters. She has an example of two is this book. One is the grandmother of the main female character. I kept wondering as I read about her if NR had drawn on pieces of herself when she created this woman. I am older and really enjoyed this lady. The second aged female is only given a few pages at different parts in the book, but she is well written with none of the platitudes so often regulated to geriatric females (and males) in fiction today.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2025Excellent read. Hard to put down. I love her light mystery- romance books.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2025This book reminded me of Obsession and Identity though not as good. With those books I was absorbed in the story This one I was along for the ride. The as subject matter was handled well. These incidents are becoming all too common unfortunately
- Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2025I wish her books did not end as I love the characters and I don’t want to leave them. Write more !!
- Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2019I wanted to write this review since I first read this book in July of 2018. As sometimes happens, life got away from me and this book and its review got filed in my “possible writing topics”. In light of recent events, specifically three mass shootings in as many days, I was searching for my “What to do in an Active Shooting” file and found this file instead. As I and the rest of my family, friends, and the world, are glued to multiple news sources, trying to find meaning in these horrible acts of violence, I find these words of mine are burning to come out! And instead of reading my “Active Shooting” notes, I re-read Shelter in Place”. Go figure, right!
I “one-click” pre-ordered this book in 2018 without even reading the synopsis! After all , this was NORA ROBERTS, one of my favorite authors and QUEEN of the “Romance, Romantic Suspense and Fantasy Romance” genre. There was never a doubt that I was going to read this novel , no matter the cost. Yet, when I read the synopsis and the first two chapters, I was struck with two thoughts:
1. This is not the usual Nora Roberts book
2. It must have taken an enormous amount of “guts” to write this story in light of the political environment in 2017-2018
After the latest rampage of violence and having re-read this book those two thoughts remain at the forefront of my mind.
As an avid Nora Roberts reader, I have come to expect several things from my favorite author. Of course I expect lots of romance, but there is also the drama that always comes with love. Yes, there is usually some kind of drama that adds to our suspense as we anxiously await to see how the herione and hero work out there happily ever after. However, no matter what trouble Nora’s characters find themselves in, fans of Nora Roberts can always count on her to bring the story to a happy ending. Yet, in Shelter in Place, I was struck by the darkness and hopeless feeling I had, as I read Nora’s very real description of the mass shooting in a mall in Portland Maine. Through the eyes of our main characters, 16 year-old Simone and college student Reed you watch the event evolve. Nora’s words transported me to the chaos of madmen firing AK-47’s at a mall full of shoppers out for a normal day of back to school shopping. I can visualize the running, the bodies and blood everywhere. I am horrified as Reed sees the gunman just keep shooting a man, while the gunman laughs. I am struck by the overwhelming terror I feel just reading about this event. Nora captures exactly what domestic terrorism is all about. While re-reading the first few chapters of this book, I realize that what frightened me the most is not how heinous the actual shootings were nor even how senseless the killings seemed. What terrified me is that unshakeable feeling that even if these perpetrators have been caught or are dead, I may never feel safe again. You see, the not so Nora theme of Shelter In Place, is for those who lives have been touched by violence it is NEVER over. For Nora Roberts, that hopelessness is out of character.
I read to momentarily escape my reality, to be transported in my mind to somewhere I have never been but have been dying to see. I want the escape that good fiction provides. In a world where I am easily distracted from my many blessings by everyday stress and drama, I like to be taken away by a book to a place where happily ever after is guaranteed. Thus I admit that by chapter 7 of this book I was thinking this story was just a little too close to home. I noticed a constant heaviness in my chest and overwhelming sense of terror, even anger. I considered putting the book away, something I rarely do , especially when it is written by one of my favorite authors. Probably because it was Nora Roberts I persevered. I am glad I did.
In this novel, Nora explores how survivors, family, friends and community deal with the aftermath of a terrifying, violent event. She allows us to take an in depth look at the psyche of the killers as well as the victims. She does this in a way that news sources can’t do without being intrusive. Nora’s characters allow us to see how deeply affected there souls are by this violence. We can see as well as feel the unique ways each person copes with the aftermath of terror. She provides an opportunity to journey with these people as they struggle to rebuild after their lives have been torn from their foundations. It is poignant. It is soul-piercing. It is Nora Robert’s story-telling at its best!
If you stick with it, Nora’s story evolves, and the romance, suspense and hope in the face of impossible odds, we have come to expect from her begins to show. There is even a “Happily ever after” while maintaining her theme that this terror is far from over. I myself am amazed at how masterful she weaves her theme as her story takes several unexpected twists and turns before concluding with the success of her herione and hero.
I
- Reviewed in the United States on March 27, 2025A mass shooting, at a mall, and the aftershocks as told by master storyteller Nora Roberts. Nora again takes us through the terror of the tragic night through the eyes of those there and beyond for the years following. A book that will take you through all of the emotions and will keep you reading nonstop.
Top reviews from other countries
- LaurenceReviewed in France on July 18, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars strongly advised
very good book, once you start you can't stop reading it !
- JudithReviewed in the Netherlands on June 5, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars An impressive novel
Had to read it in one go. Had to cry sometimes, as emotions seep through this novel. The story is so close to things that are happening now in this world and so wel written this might have been based on reality. I love nora roberts as a writer. She has a way of drawing you in to the story.be part of it. It must not have been easy to write this. Characters are fully thought out, work welI am looking forward to reading it again story
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Cliente AmazonReviewed in Spain on November 8, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars Recomendable. Emotivo
Recomendable. Emotivo.
- TaliaReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 30, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars A story of love, obsession and life affirming joy
This is the first Nora Roberts book I have read and it’s not my usual sort of story. I found the writing to be excellent and the characters real and interesting. What starts out as a dreadful shooting in a shopping mall turns out to be a life changing event for everyone involved, in so many different ways.
The person responsible for planning the shooting is a tortured soul. Her brother, one of the shooters, dies in the event with the other two shooters. However she isn’t finished with her revenge and she sets about with a long list of people who she feels also deserve to die. She is known to be responsible for the shootings, but finding her isn’t easy. She is a master of disguise and she calmly goes about killing people in her deadly need for revenge.
Thrown together as a result of the incident, the two main characters are at the top of her hit list. But they are just as determined as she is to stop her from any more killing. There are some beautiful characters in this book and they far outweigh the evil. It’s a great story with an expected perfect ending.
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Cliente AmazonReviewed in Brazil on February 29, 2020
4.0 out of 5 stars Psicopata que resolve se vingar do mundo
Conteúdo muito bom, apesar de muito diálogo, marca registrada de Nora Roberts.
Dentro da caracterisrica da escritora, eu recomendo.