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review 2017-09-27 00:00
The Opportunist (Love Me With Lies, #1)
The Opportunist (Love Me With Lies, #1) - Tarryn Fisher This book pulled on every emotion

Olivia and Caleb. I love them together. I hate them together. The have an intense love for each other. The heap an incredible amount of hurt on each other. Still, the ending was unexpected, atypical, and yet the right one. Not a cliffhanger. Not really. Though the story is definitely not quite finished and there is a book 2 and 3, you can end at 1 and be ok if you want to. I'm not doing that though. This was my first book by Tarryn Fisher and I most definitely have to read book 2 and 3 now, just because.
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review 2016-05-16 18:38
The Opportunist by Tarryn Fisher
The Opportunist - Tarryn Fisher

My emotions were all over the place with this book, especially at the end and it takes a lot for that to happen to me. Tarryn Fisher has such talent at creating flawed characters that you slowly fall in love with. They’re so realistic that you can understand their every choice, be it good or bad

 

The story begins when the protagonist, Olivia, has just discovered that her ex-boyfriend has lost his memory, meaning that he can’t remember the events surrounding their break-up. Olivia, a character who is racked with guilt and self-doubt, decides to run with Caleb’s amnesia and doesn’t inform him of their previous relationship. This was just the first of many questionable decisions that Olivia makes in her desire to be reunited with Caleb. We find out that Caleb has a girlfriend in the present, which is the source of much of the difficulty they have in being together once again.

 

As this book works in deep POV, we as the reader don’t know the events that lead to Caleb and Olivia’s split. We gradually get this information as the chapters alternate between past and present. This proved a little jarring at first because the chapters from the present are written in present tense and the ones set in the past are written in past tense. It did take a little time for me to adjust to this, but as the chapters were long and the narrative flowed well, I quickly got used to it.

 

When Olivia first meets Caleb at University I thought it was going to be instalove, but it turned into something much more complex within a brief period. This complexity was largely at the hands of Olivia, a woman who suffered previous abandonment and fought with her growing dependency for Caleb. This internal battle that Olivia fought framed much of the novel.

 

We are told Olivia had done some terrible things to be with Caleb (when she admitted how much she needed him) and as terrible as some were, they were all driven by desperation. She was an inherently complex character who was crippled by self-sabotage and drove herself further downwards in order to rectify what she’d done.

 

It wasn’t until the halfway point that I realized it was part of a series. I’ve already read the final instalment, but skipped the second as it was told from Leah’s perspective. I started to read the second book, but stopped after only a few pages because Leah said something that was very triggering for me. I doubt others would have this problem, but she was a horrible character anyway, so I wasn’t bothered at missing her part.

 

Calab wasn’t delved into hugely in this book, but is in the third, which is great because while hecomplimented Olivia brilliantly, he wasn’t hugely multi-dimensional here. I think all the authors time went into creating Olivia, which I’m so glad she did as she was a fascinating character.

 

This was essentially a romance/suspense and it triumphed in both. The chemistry between Caleb and Olivia was palpable, as was the suspense, especially in the last third. There was only one sex scene, by the way, which was well written and not at all smutty.

 

The ending was fantastic and ripped my heart in two, so be warned!

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review 2015-11-03 02:21
What You Took From Me: Loving An Opportunist
WHAT YOU TOOK FROM ME: LOVING AN OPPORTUNIST - DALE RIDLEY

Title: What You Too From Me: Loving An Opportunist
Author: Dale Ridley
Publisher: True Glory Publications
Reviewed By: Arlena Dean
Rating: Five
Review:

"What You Took From Me: Loving An Opportunist" by Dale Ridley

My Thoughts.....

Interesting read that will definitely leave you wanting the next series to see what will all come of this story with Shaun as he seems to be maneuvered by his patrol officer, Maria.

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review 2015-04-10 21:47
A BIG FAT WTF is in order!!!!
The Opportunist (Love Me With Lies, #1) - Tarryn Fisher

photo fucking fuck.gif
Why are the reviews so great for this?!?!?
photo 4NBZd.gif
So here's the deal, apparently I'm the only one who doesn't think TF shits pure gold. I don't get it. Seriously, every one of the characters are manipulative backstabbing lying ass bitches, Caleb, Olivia, Leah, and douchebag Turner.
Just goes to show conniving teenages turn in to mean bitches, nothing changes.
photo whatthehell.gif
is wrong with Noah?!?! What made him thing let's put a ring on it after listening to the crazy ass stalker story?!?!

Did I hate this as much as Gone Girl? No, but I def wouldn't say I liked it. I had ZERO emotional connection with any of them.
I'm left scratching my head.....

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review 2015-03-22 17:18
The Opportunist by Tarryn Fisher
The Opportunist - Tarryn Fisher

This book was twisted. These characters are seriously messed up. Olivia, Caleb, Leah; they're all screwed up in the head.

 

This book is told from the perspective of Olivia. She runs into her ex-boyfriend, Caleb, with whom things did not end well. She discovers that he has amnesia and cannot remember who she is. She decides to use this to her advantage and get to know him again. One of the main obstacles is Caleb's current girlfriend, Leah. He doesn't remember her either.

 

I loved the way the story is told (present tense chapters alternating with past tense chapters). It was masterful the way Tarryn Fisher wove the two time frames together. We simultaneously see Olivia and Caleb get to know each other again interspersed with scenes from them getting to know each other the first time. I really enjoyed seeing them fall in love during their college days.

 

Olivia is one twisted chick. It was hard though not to empathize with her emotional issues given her upbringing and family situation. She is a perfect example of somebody being willing to accept the love that they think they deserve, which in her case is none. She made several mistakes along the way. Several. But it was clear that her character was developing as the story went on. By the Epilogue it was clear she was still messed up, but not nearly as bad as she was previously.

 

Caleb, however, is no angel. I've heard and seen several reviews where people demonize Olivia and make Caleb out to be this innocent bystander who was just blindsided and destroyed by this vixen. He made his fair share of mistakes and did his fair share of manipulating Olivia. Especially that whammy of a twist toward the end.

 

Their story was angsty in both past and present. I frequently wanted to slap both of them across their faces. This book definitely wreaked some emotional havoc on me in a way no other one has since Avoiding Commitment.

 

All in all I felt bad for Caleb and Olivia. They were two people who couldn't make it work, but couldn't let go of each other either. Since this is a trilogy, I'm very intrigued to see where this story goes. These are three very twisted characters.

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