![]() Lexi’s new life comes complete with a gorgeous husband and Kensington apartment with 10,000 quid sofas and a lighting design that covers everything from Mood: Seduction 1 to Disco Strobe! Her old besties, Debs, Caro and Fi are no where to be seen, despite the repeated messages she’s left them. She’s also now the manager of her dept when before she was just lowly sales. ![]() Her personal effects contain a Louis Vuitton bag and a tangle of very expensive gold jewellery. She’s slim, toned, expensively done nails, white shiny teeth and sleek, shining chestnut hair. Gone are her crooked teeth, gone is the frizzy hair. Not only is Lexi 3 years older than she remembers being, she’s not the person that she remembers being. It’s 2007 and she’s now old, she’s 28 (her words! I’m 28 myself, so I winced a little upon reading every proclamation that she was now old!). Lexi Smart wakes up in hospital from a week unconscious and is stunned to learn that it’s no longer 2004 and she’s not 25 anymore. The comparisons are ginormous, but thankfully there are enough differences to stop this read from being unenjoyable. ![]() What I didn’t realise was just how similar until I started reading. I said in my Library post that this book sounded very similar to What Alice Forgot. ![]()
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