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![Night Road by [Kristin Hannah]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/519HyQq9efL._SY346_.jpg)
Night Road Kindle Edition
Kristin Hannah (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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Night Road is the story of three teenagers: Lexi, Mia and her twin brother Zach.
Lexi's childhood was spent watching her alcoholic mother slowly poison herself to death. Mia and Zach Farraday, on the other hand, had an idyllic childhood with everything they could possible want from an adoring and doting mother. The twins meet Lexi on their first day of high school.
Lexi, sweet-natured and gentle, finds a soul mate in Mia and they become best friends. Lexi falls in love with Zach the moment she first sets eyes on him but she never imagines that he'd ever look at her in any way other than as his beloved twin's best friend. But it turns out that Zach is absolutely crazy about Lexi, he just doesn't want to jeapardize her relationship with Mia.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMacmillan
- Publication date1 March 2011
- Reading age18 years and up
- File size887 KB
Product description
Book Description
Review
Hannah masterfully details the unraveling of a family. (People magazine)
Hannah is superb at delving into the characters’ psyches and delineating nuances of feeling. (The Washington Post)
A moving coming-of-age story. (Heat)
Unforgettable. (Easy Living)
A gripping, emotional read. (SHE magazine)
Night Road is one special book that can transform the lives of readers by influencing how they think about certain important life issues. The reader becomes a first-hand witness to the pitfalls of parenthood, mortality, heartbreak, guilt, life choices, grief, forgiveness, and much more. In short, the entire range of human emotions are explored in this…hopeful book about the triumphant power of the human spirit in the process of forgiveness. (New York Journal of Books)
A rich, multilayered reading experience, and an easy recommendation for book clubs. (Library Journal (starred review))
A story of sibling love, friendship and loss. I cried a lot. (Look magazine)
Night Road is like a guilty pleasure. It’s a more grown-up, present-day version of The O.C. and is about a group of young people, who’ve something terrible happening in their lives. The book is basically about the consequence of this one terrible night and how it changes their lives forever. (Saturday Magazine, Daily Express) --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
About the Author
From the Author
Kristin Hannah is the New York Times bestselling author of eighteen novels. She is a former lawyer turned writer and is the mother of one son. She and her husband live in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii. For more information, visit www.kristinhannah.com
--This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.Product details
- ASIN : B004UIQJLC
- Publisher : Macmillan; Main Market edition (1 March 2011)
- Language : English
- File size : 887 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 446 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: 8,589 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Kristin Hannah is the award-winning and bestselling author of more than 20 novels including the international blockbuster, The Nightingale, which was named Goodreads Best Historical fiction novel for 2015 and won the coveted People's Choice award for best fiction in the same year. It was also named a Best Book of the Year by Amazon, iTunes, Buzzfeed, the Wall Street Journal, Paste, and The Week. In 2018, The Great Alone became an instant New York Times #1 bestseller and was named the Best Historical Novel of the Year by Goodreads.
The Four Winds was published in February of 2021 and immediately hit #1 on the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and Indie bookstore's bestseller lists. Additionally, it was selected as a book club pick by the both Today Show and The Book Of the Month club.
The Nightingale is currently in production at Tri Star, with Dakota and Elle Fanning set to star. Tri Star has also optioned The Great Alone and it is in development. Firefly Lane, her novel about two best friends, was the #1 Netflix show around the world, in the week it came out. The popular tv show stars Katherine Heigl and Sarah Chalke and Season Two is currently being filmed.
www.kristinhannah.com
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Top reviews from Australia
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Jude Farraday is mother to twins Zach and Mia - polar opposites and partners in crime. Mia is shy and reclusive, while Zach is popular and outgoing. The two are best friends, and the pride of Jude's life. Jude's doctor husband, Miles, may have a point about her helicopter-parenting and reluctance to cut the apron-strings where the twins are concerned, but Jude's own childhood was a lonely one cut off from her mother after her father's death, and she won't do that to Mia and Zach.
When Mia and Lexi strike up a powerful bond over a shared-love of classic literature, Jude is both relieved and nervous. Lexi brings Mia out of her shell, but Jude is also aware that the Farraday's have a very different, privileged life to that of Lexi and her aunt . . . then there's the fact that Mia has been hurt in the past, when her girlfriends developed crushes on Zach, and abandoned Mia for him.
But Mia and Lexi prove to have a bond that's almost as strong as the one Mia and Zach have - and for three years they are the best of friends . . . until one night changes everything. Zach is left an only-child, Jude is cut adrift and Lexi takes on the burden of blame - and none of them will ever be the same again.
`Night Road' was the 2011 popular fiction title from Kristin Hannah.
This novel is just awful. I hated reading it - all the characters irked me, and some of them made me want to reach into the story and throttle them. But I kept reading because I wanted to know how it would end. . . this book is, literally, like a McDonalds meal that you start feeling guilty about from the first bite but you can't stop yourself from finishing all of it.
We begin in 2000, when Lexi arrives at Port George and strikes up a friendship with Mia and is welcomed into the Farraday bosom by Jude. The first few pages introduce us to Lexi - a young girl who has had an unfair share of heartache in her short life. Between foster homes and witnessing her mother's decline (more than once) her arrival in Port George to live with her unknown Aunt Eva is the first really good thing to happen to Lexi, possibly in her whole life.
Then we're introduced to Jude - who is panicking about her kid's first day of high school. She's worried that Mia won't make friends, and she's concerned about the kind of friends Zach will make . . . yep, Jude is one of those parents. Meeting Jude and the Farraday family after having first met Lexi is rather jarring - even more so when Jude goes over the floor-plan of their massive manor-home (the kids have the entire first floor to themselves - including a gaming room.) Straight away, I was on Lexi's side and more invested in her story and narrative voice. I'll always root for the underdog, and compared to the obnoxious wealth of the Farraday's, Lexi is an extreme-underdog
Then the timeline of this story starts getting a little skewed . . . we jump ahead from 2000 to three years later (right in an odd place too, Hannah snaps forward right before we're about to read Jude, Mia and Lexi start bonding on a girl's outing).
The next little chunk of timeline concerns Lexi and Zach's developing feelings for one another in senior year of high school - something they have to hide from Mia because she's so fragile after having one friend in the past hook-up and break-up with her brother that has apparently scarred her for life. Geez. You know things aren't good when you give characters nicknames in your head - Mia was `needy-psycho' to me. This girl just grated - though I think Hannah meant to portray her as a sweet, innocent soul who needed looking after . . . I just read `whinger'. This section of story also concerns Lexi working round-the-clock at an ice-cream store to try and scrape enough money together to go to a small state school, while Mia and Zach are struggling to decide between USC, Yale, Stanford . . . and of course dominating parent, Jude, is stressing right along with them. When Lexi's Aunt Eva contemplates dipping into her life-savings to help Lexi go to a four-year school, I officially wanted to smack every Farraday character over the head, repeatedly.
Now, a huge let-down of this book is the supposed soul-mate romance of Zach and Lexi - which is meant to cover all manner of ills and explain a lot, later in the story. It doesn't help that Zach is written a little too true-to-life as a teenage boy who says not a whole lot. Seriously - when Hannah pulls the "he's in love with her!" card I was sitting there thinking `Really? How can you tell? The boy does not talk!' Actually, Zach suffers the same fate as his father, Miles, in that neither male character does or says a whole lot. The men in this story feel depleted and sidelined, completely overpowered by the women despite them all going through the same losses and traumas. This is especially bad for Jude's story - I might have warmed to her if she had been a well-rounded woman but she is literally labelled MOTHER and not much else. Her marriage, despite going through the biggest trauma any relationship can experience, is just back-burner to her being a mother (and then a mother who loses a child). She gardens, but that's really her only discernible characteristic. She has her own mother-issues, but they're anaemic and not at all an excuse for her being such a one-dimensional mother-cyborg. I get that this is the point of `Night Road' - here is a woman who sees herself as a mother and nothing else, and what happens when that's (partly) taken away from her? Well, that's boring to me. Jude is the book-equivalent of all those people in my Facebook feed who only post photos and updates about their kids and nothing else - as if they weren't really alive until they had offspring. Blergh.
The second-half of the story jumps ahead to 2010 and concerns everyone's fate after the tragic accident that kills Mia . . . and lays blame entirely (unfairly) at Lexi's feet.
Now, if this had been a Jodi Picoult novel, you can bet this would have been the point that the story started. Because this is the most interesting portion of the whole book - everything else that came before; setting up Mia & Zach's twin-dynamic, Jude's helicopter parenting, the kids growing, Lexi & Zach's romance . . . all that was just boring filler. Part-two of the story, which starts at page 241 of this 385-page book, is where the whole thing should have started from (with some backtracking of story origin). Here is where Hannah pulls out questions of morality, forgiving, guilt and redemption.
Jude just gets worse. Maybe I was meant to feel sympathy for her - but I have little sympathy for those determined to be victims and wallow in their own pain while blaming and punishing others for their state of being.
I cannot, for the life of me, tell you why I didn't chuck this book away about 20 pages into it. But I think I was looking forward to the skip-ahead portion, when we get to the meat of the morality-story. And, honestly, I did race to read this last half (though it left me utterly unsatisfied). Hannah rushes the ending, and what could actually take up an entire 300+ pages is watered-down with happily-ever-after shenanigans and unbelievable resolutions .
I know that popular-fiction writers get a bad rep. Their books are seen as nothing more substantial than fairy-floss . . . but, by God!, there are nuances within this genre. Someone like Jodi Picoult can have me enraptured in a couple of chapters, and I'll finish one of (admittedly, earlier) books a weeping-wreck, but completely satisfied. Then you read someone like Kristin Hannah who writes despicable characters like Jude (I'm convinced we were meant to like her) and waffles on for 280-pages writing absolute filler rubbish - only to leave the actual meat of the story for the last 100 rushed pages. But, you know, I can only blame myself for this one - I knew it was bad after the first chapter, but I kept punishing myself and reading it. Fool me once.
1.5/5
Top reviews from other countries


The Night Road is an emotional rollercoaster that surrounds the events that took place, that simmer in 2004.
The characterisation is intense, with each character playing a role in the story of what took place that summer. Teen siblings Mia and Zach are at the heart of the tale. Mia’s best friend Lexi is new to the area and moving into a local trailer park with her aunt, finally escaping a life in foster care. Mia and Zach’s mother Jude also plays a central role, as she becomes like a mother to Lexi.
Judy Farraday is the mother we all wish to be. She has known her own share of heartache and difficult upbringing, but she hasn’t let it impact the way she has chosen to raise her kids. They are at the heart of every decision she comes to make. She often agonises over every minor detail in their lives.
‘It’s impossible to love you children too much’ - Jude
Pine Island high school is where Lexi and Mia first meet and instantly strike up a deep friendship. Mia finds it difficult to fit in and Lexi is new to town and looking to settle in and get on with her education. Too often children are forced to carry the stigma of their own parents and this becomes evident in Lexi’s life. I felt quite emotional at times during Lexi’s story and the theme’s were really tear jerking.
As with all teenage friendships there will be secrets and forbidden love. But for these teens the mistakes they make one night will have a massive impact on all their futures. Can Jude protect her children? And will Lexi survive saying bye to more people in her life?
The raw honesty of the situation is astounding. I cannot say too much here for fear of leaving spoilers. But this book left a huge dent in my heart. 4*
‘A girl without a mother was a prisoner of a different kind’

This book is about love, hope, friendship, grieving, loss, forgiveness, acceptance and letting go. I love it. It's beautifully written and tugs at your heart strings. It takes you on a whirlwind of emotions - laughing one minute and then sobbing the next. It is truly one of those books that you will never forget.
The characters were amazing and you felt connected to them, there's no other way to describe them. They felt real, their emotions felt real. I absolutely adored Zach, he tugged at my heart strings and made me want to reach through the book and just give him a nice big, friendly hug. To me he suffered the most but he always seemed to pick himself up and carry on even when he just wanted to curl up and grieve for his loss. Lexi was wonderfully written about, she was a well developed character, the way she grew in the book was astonishing. Jude was another character who was well developed she's one of those overbearing mums but her heart was always in the right place until she lost sight of who she was.
The book tied up nicely at the end. It all came together nicely and didn't leave you questioning anything. Even though I read this book a few years ago I still had no idea what was going to happen next. The story was gripping and definitely makes you want to keep turning the page. I will be recommending this book for years to come.

