There You'll Find Me by Jenny B. Jones
- The Beautiful Bookshelf

- Jul 12, 2024
- 2 min read
Updated: Jul 15, 2024
Finley Sinclair is not your typical eighteen-year-old. She's witty, tough, and driven. With an upcoming interview at the Manhattan music conservatory, Finley needs to compose her audition piece. But her creativity disappeared with the death of her older brother, Will.
She decides to study abroad in Ireland so she can follow Will's travel journal. It's the place he felt closest to God, and she's hopeful being there will help her make peace over losing him. So she agrees to an exchange program and boards the plane.
Beckett Rush, teen heartthrob and Hollywood bad boy, is flying to Ireland to finish filming his latest vampire movie. On the flight, he meets Finley. She's the one girl who seems immune to his charm. Undeterred, Beckett convinces her to be his assistant in exchange for his help as a tour guide.
Once in Ireland, Finley starts to break down. The loss of her brother and the pressure of school, her audition, and whatever it is that is happening between her and Beckett, leads her to a new and dangerous vice. When is God going to show up for her in this emerald paradise?
Then she experiences something that radically changes her perspective on life. Could it be God convincing her that everything she's been looking for has been with her all along?
Overview from Book Cover
There You'll Find Me by Jenny Jones is a heart moving book that makes the reader feel like they are going with Finley through the highs and lows she is currently enduring. I loved how moving the story is and how real Finley and Beckett's chemistry was. Finley, who resented Beckett for his fame, learned to truly see how he is on the inside and not just her rash first judgments. The grief Finley goes through in the beginning of the book was truly very sad and heartbreaking to read but beautiful when you reached her healing in the climax of the book. I would 8/10 recommend this book for anyone who likes romance or where the character learns God is in control of their life.
*Things to Mention
Several kisses. Finley faints once. There is a mean girl at school who causes drama. Beckett's image is scene as a player, however in the story we find out this in entirely untrue. Finley's brother was killed by terrorists before the book begins. Finley struggled with depression and an eating disorder for a time.
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