Member Reviews

This book was an amazing read, that took you places you didn't know you were going to go. I was fully absorbed in this book right off the bat and flew through it in one day. The author did an amazing job with the plot and making the characters unique but relatable. I will be recommending this book to all of my patrons, family, and friends. Great read!

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Thank you NetGalley for my ARC :)
This story follows Margot as she ventures off to Pompeii & Rome in search of a mythical artifact, the Vase of Venus Aurelia. But first, she needs to find all five of the missing pieces; as she already has one shard. To find these, she is guided by the journal of a lost teen, Van Keane, who originally found them years ago. But what Margot doesn't expect to find, is Van Keane himself, as he turns from stone to living flesh. The two must work together to find the missing pieces, in this enemies to lovers story, as each is searching for the vase for their own gain.

My experience with the novel: I'm not sure if its because I have never been to Pompeii or Rome, but I found it hard to follow the description of the world they were in; I would have wanted more. Therefore, the world building was not the main perspective of the story. The action felt rushed, like it wanted to get your heart pumping in this 'Indiana Jones' feel; again for me, I wanted more description, it was hard for me to follow along on their adventure. The ending felt rushed- but it was satisfying. I did enjoyed the banter between Margot and Van though. And I also did not see the ending coming, plot twist!! Super cute overall. I would totally recommend this to younger teens that want an adventure read, with light mild romance.

I would tag this as: mild romance- clean read- adventure- fantasy- young adult

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A nice, middle book to read with an interesting premise interweaving some Greek mythology references and archaeology. The romance is cute and I feel like plenty of readers will relate to Margot and Van equally. A bit predictable at times, but worth a read nonetheless.

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A fast-paced romantic-comedy adventure. I think a lot of readers will be gobble up the romance here, and Margot is absolutely delightful. Her (3rd-person) narration made me smile more than once, and I know my teenage-self would have identified with her. This book does require quite a bit of suspension of disbelief (and I mean this in regard to the realistic aspects of the story--not the magical relics of ancients gods), but it's good fun if you are able to let go and just roll with it.

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5/5

Falling in love with the statue you brought back to life while searching for the shards of a missing artifact that may grant you your heart's greatest desire? It’s more likely than you think.

Rachel Moore’s sophomore novel is for anyone who loves The Mummy, high-stakes adventures, and romance novels, all wrapped in an incandescent Italian summer. Margot Rhodes, A high schooler known to try everything and commit to nothing, schemes her way onto her school’s archaeological trip to Pompeii but gets more than she bargained for when she accidentally ignites an age-old search for the mythical Vase of Venus Aurelia. Enveloped in the architecture of Italy and its history, Us in Ruins centers an unlikely partnership between soft-hearted Margot and stubborn former statue Van Keane, overshadowed by moments of yearning and keen understanding. I needed a fun romantic adventure in my life and this absolutely nailed that, while also serving an unexpected amount of angst. Us In Ruins is for the people who want too much but don’t know how to reach for it, who are so scared of disappointment that they never settle for just one thing — who ultimately find solace in the love that they never expected to be granted. In her latest, Rachel Moore expertly balances adventure, cleverness, and heart, as two complete opposites realize the real quest might be winning the other's heart.

This will be featured on my blog closer to the publication date

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Margot Rhodes may have dove head first into many ideas of who she wanted to be in the past, and given up on them all, but she is determined that this time it's going to stick. Her application to spend the summer in Rome working on an excavation site was approved, beating out other applicants, and she is ready for the adventure. Her fellow students, however, are less enthusiastic about her presence, since they've all be taking archeology classes and Margot hasn't.
But Margot has been obsessed for a while with a novel and a true life story, both revolving around the same ancient artifact, the Vase of Venus Aurelius. Most people believe the vase is a myth, but Margot believes it is real and she's going to find it. But the first thing she finds is actually the statue of a boy who was hunting the vase one hundred years ago and was thought to have died when a site he was excavating collapsed. And when Margot gets close the statue, he comes back to life.
Now Margot and Van have no choice but to work together to hunt down the scattered pieces of the vase and put them back together. If they can survive the trials and find all five treasure and fame will be there's. If they can't, its probably because they died along the way.

The premise of this book is a little cheesy, and requires some suspension of disbelief when statues start coming to life all over the place. But the heart behind the story is fun. And if you're an Indiana Jones fan the trials they have to get through to retrieve the pieces of the vase are great.
The fraught enemies to lovers relationship between Van and Margot takes a front seat ahead of their adventures which slows down the plot and could be disengaging for some. Also the plot twist that came toward the end was really obvious. And since one of the "big reveals" was actually known by Van the entire time, it really felt like a stretch to believe they didn't figure it out before... The ending missed a few beats for me too. I enjoyed the resolution to the climax, but the 'what comes next' part really dropped the ball and left me feeling unsatisfied. Everything resolved to neatly without any explanation of how it happened, and certain details got way to glossed over. But overall it was a fun book, and I enjoyed reading it.

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