Identity by Nora Roberts

I love it when Nora Roberts dives a little deeper than just a simple romance.

A woman hell bent on making it on her own ~ A man set on destroying her. Whooo-Wee!

Growing up an army brat and moving from city to city, Morgan Albright was longing to plant roots and make her mark in this world.

With a ton of hard work, and a little help from her best friend and roommate, Nina she was doing just that—until Luke Hudson walked into her bar. Now nothing is the same.

Her home has been burglarized, her car has been stolen, her bank accounts emptied and her best friend has been murdered—in cold blood.

After a visit from the FBI, Morgan learns the awful truth. Not only has the killer stolen her identity and all that she has worked so hard for. Nina was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. Morgan was really his intended victim.

With no option left, other than to move back into her family home with her mother and grandmother, Morgan has a chance for a fresh start. But when bodies start to drop wearing pieces of jewelry that were stolen in the robbery, she knows the killer is still out there and he is sending a message to the one who got away. He’s coming for her.

Identity is one of the best Nora Roberts books that I have read in a long time. She always seems to get you right in the feels.

If you are in a book club or even if it’s just a book club of one, here are some questions for you to ponder while you make your way through this awesome read.

Book Club Questions:

  1. Would you like to see this book turned into a movie or a mini-series? Who would you cast as the main characters?
  2. What topic from this book, if any, do you wish the author would have expanded on?
  3. Did you learn anything from this book?
  4. What are the major themes of this book and how are they represented?
  5. When did you have the first inkling that the main character was in trouble? How did the situation end up differing from what you originally thought it would be?
  6. Which character, if any, did you identify with? Why do you think you connected with them?
  7. In what ways did this story make you reflect on your own life?
  8. Who was your favorite character from this book and why?
  9. If that character had their own book, what might the story be about? Or if it was the main character, how would you have wrote the story different?
  10. What emotions did the antagonist make you feel? Were all of them negative?

I hope you enjoy this read as much as I did. If you haven’t already, you can get the book here on Amazon or get it for free when you sign up for a free trial from Audible.

As always, stay brash, stay bookish, stay true to you and have a fabulous rest of your week! We are half way there!

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