

Spanning years of travel and hectic life, Janice Templeton and Elliot Hoover are connected in cosmic senses by loss, rebirth, and the soul of one little girl. To India, to holy places of serenity and silence.īut Hoover may be the key to saving Bill, when, in his fractured mental state, he starts to study the Hindu religion for himself. The only thing that soothed these nightmares was Elliot Hoover's voice.Įlliot Hoover's voice calling her Audrey Rose.īut Ivy's death, while taking her from her parents, took her from Hoover all over again. She screamed for her father, though Bill was no comfort, and that it was 'HOT'. Janice Templeton would normally never believe in such a thing.īut, Ivy did suffer night terrors in the weeks leading up to her suspicious death.

While the practice steadied his life, and did give him peace, Hoover tragically learned of the Hindu belief in reincarnation. He was a broken man.įallen into despair and needing, more than anything, a belief, Hoover gave himself to the study and practice of Hindusim. Meanwhile her mother, Janice, leans on friends, family.Īnd the man who stalked Ivy until her death.Įlliot Hoover, whose daughter Audrey Rose was killed in a fiery car crash just moments before Ivy Templeton was born, lost everything.

Her devastated father, Bill, throws himself into alcohol and mindless wandering until he suffers a nervous breakdown. Ivy Templeton, a pretty, creative, fun-loving little girl, has just died. Our story begins, in newspaper articles, in 1975. It's been, like, FIVE DAYS since I finished this smoldering garbage, and looking at the cover makes me want to punch a stop sign. Oh the RAGE you poor souls will have to witness. The worst? I spent a perfectly good Saturday morning that could've been spent with cartoons and/budget horror movies finishing it.

The best thing about this book? It didn't take me quite ten days to read. Zombieslayer/Alienhunter's 31 Days Of Hallo-reads #3
