![]() I also enjoyed how the different types of narrative, at first strange to me, didn’t get in the way of the story, made the story run smoothly, and brought unique perspectives to the plot, as two of the three characters were in the past and had different socioeconomic backgrounds while one character is in the future, looking back and trying to piece together the puzzle of what happened in the past. Personally, I enjoyed The Glass Ocean, as I felt as though all the characters’ storylines were connected since there were points that were connected, even though they may have been small points. The Glass Ocean by Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig, and Karen White follows three women as the Lusitania steams toward its untimely demise. She is really Tennessee Schaff, daughter of a con man and an expert of forging. Book Review - THE GLASS OCEAN by Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig, Karen White (Discussion) - YouTube Spoiler Warning The Reading Cove Book Clubs podcast episode 102. Tessa Fairweather is traveling back home to Devon, U.K., or that is the story that she is telling fellow passengers. On board the RMS Lusitania, in 1915, Caroline Hochstetter’s marriage is in a crisis her husband, once attentive toward her, has been more focused on business. Desperate, she opens a chest that once belonged to her great-grandfather who died on board the RMS Lusitania, which was sunk by a German U Boat in 1915. In May 2013, author Sarah Blake is struggling to find a big idea for her next book. ![]()
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