Blog Tour & Daphnie's Review: Behind your Back by Chelsea M. Cameron


 
 
 
BEHIND YOUR BACK by Chelsea M. Cameron


May 26, 2015
(Back to Back, #1)






BOOK SUMMARY:


To get to him, I need to use her.
I’ll play her like a violin and have her falling in love with me before she even knows what’s happening.
It will be easy. I’ve done it before and I’ll do it again.
She’s just a girl.
A tool to get what I want.
When I’m done with her I won’t think twice about walking away.
At least, that was what I thought.
Until I met her.
 
 
 
 
 
This was my first book that I read from Chelsea M. Cameron.  The synopsis of this book sound intriguing. Behind Your Back was a very detailed book. This characters are living two different lives. The twists and turns keep you reading.
 
Quinn/Sylas Band is smart, mysterious and a power player, he knows how to get what he wants.  He is a "finical advisor" and a conn man and him and his team do a great job at what they do.
 
Saige is part of his plan, until he set eye on her. All thing change after that. Saige is an interesting character, very unique.
 
Behind Your Back will keep you guessing throughout your read. I had a love hate relationship with this book. I struggled to get through the first 35%. After that I was able to push through to the end. All though the book was very detailed at time I thought it was over detailed and I new way to much about Quinn and what he was doing. The ending.... Wow. That will have me reading book 2.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



The next book in the series, BACK TO BACK, will be released on June 9th!






Author Information




Chelsea M. Cameron is a YA/NA New York Times/USA Today Best Selling author from Maine. Lover of things random and ridiculous, Jane Austen/Charlotte and Emily Bronte Fangirl, red velvet cake enthusiast, obsessive tea drinker, vegetarian, former cheerleader and world's worst video gamer. When not writing, she enjoys watching infomercials, singing in the car and tweeting (this one time, she was tweeted by Neil Gaiman). She has a degree in journalism from the University of Maine, Orono that she promptly abandoned to write about the people in her own head. More often than not, these people turn out to be just as weird as she is.




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