
This is definitely the type of book that needs some time to process and really sink in. At first I wasn't sure what I thought about it and whether I liked it or not. The switch between the flashbacks and the current events in court kept me wanting more and made me read the whole thing in a couple of hours. I didn't intend to finish it in one sitting, but once I started reading I was unable to stop. This unbiased review is from an unsolicited copy provided by Text Publishing. Kate is not an entirely reliable narrator and not all readers will appreciate the ambiguity of the ending.

While this volume can probably stand alone, readers who have not read Stolen may find the lack of prior knowledge about Gemma’s ordeal frustrating. The Perth courtroom scenes are interspersed with the story of Kate’s return to Western Australia, their journey to the place where Ty held her a decade previous, and the events that follow. The story is told by Kate in a dual timeline first-person narrative addressed to Ty MacFarlane. Because what if this is it, and you really are gone?”

You’re still there in my head, of course – you’ve been part of me for so long, and I have such a sense of loyalty – but something is shifting inside. “These days I’m finding it harder to tell what you might like. This is one of those novels that feels a bit like a train wreck happening before your eyes and you just can’t look away: with each step Kate takes, and each rationalisation of her actions, the effect of her ordeal on her mental health becomes more apparent. When she is officially notified of Ty’s pending early release, she burns bridges with her fledgling romantic relationship and finds herself making plans of which she is certain her mother will not approve.īack in Perth, mere days before Ty’s release, Kate is making preparations for a role reversal which can hardly end well, and later sees her before the Supreme Court of Western Australia. She still sees her therapist, but lately is less honest about her thoughts and feelings, especially those about Ty.


She works from home for an online travel agency, tries to be independent from her (overprotective?) mother, feeds and watches a vixen in her yard, and swims regularly as a release from her conflicted thoughts and emotions. Ten years after sixteen-year-old Gemma Toombs was abducted from Bangkok Airport and held for some months in the West Australian desert by Tyler MacFarlane, she is living in London as Kate Stone. Release is the sequel to Australian author Lucy Christopher’s YA novel, Stolen.
