I liked this story because it is about finding your voice and overcoming your past. She wants Rider to stop worrying about her and figure out how to turn his life around. Rider has the reputation of a school rebel between spray painting the school, skipping class to catch up with her, and disappearing all together. Mallory worries about Rider and his foster family but quickly discovers he is as protective with his foster brothers as he was with her. Mallory discovers there is more between them than trauma and old history. Immediately she begins to reconnect with her former friend much to the dismay of her new parents who believe the past is the past. She hadn’t seen Rider since the accident because they were separated. There she runs into Rider Stark, the boy who had saved her life countless times at her old foster home. After three years of therapy, Mallory decides to go to high school for her senior year instead of being home schooled. Nicknamed “Mouse” by her childhood friend, she refuses to speak because she learned at her foster home that talking meant she got beat up. The book is about a foster girl named Mallory Dodge who is rescued from a traumatizing foster home after a dreadful accident and is adopted by a couple in Baltimore. Around three hours later, I finished the book and loved it. I didn’t know anything about it and had never heard of it, but the idea and plot sounded interesting. I found this book when browsing at the library, read the back cover, the first few chapters and then checked it out. The Problem with Forever By: Jennifer Armentrout
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