Impossible by Nancy Werlin

Impossible (Impossible, #1)

by Nancy Werlin

When seventeen-year-old Lucy discovers her family is under an ancient curse by an evil Elfin Knight, she realizes to break the curse she must perform three impossible tasks before her daughter is born in order to save them both.

Reviewed by Stephanie on

1 of 5 stars

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I've had this book sitting on my bookshelf since late 2009. I finally got myself to read it, but now I know why I've been avoiding it for so long. I was really intrigued by this story because it's based off of a song, "Scarborough Fair", which I have never heard of until I started reading and decided to look it up.

So basically, the story is about Lucy Scarborough who is cursed to become pregnant at 17, just like her ancestors before her. If she doesn't complete three tasks that are mentioned in the song "Scarborough Fair" then she will go insane and pass the curse onto her daughter.

I found myself very impatient while I read. We don't even get to the impossible tasks until about 200 pages in. I felt like there were a lot of scenes that could have been left out and the story wouldn't have been affected at all. Which, I started skimming over a lot of pages, just to get to the part that I was interested in. The only reason I finished the book was because I was interested in how Lucy would finished the tasks.

The relationship between Lucy and Zach didn't seem genuine to me. It seemed like they were only getting together because it was convenient. There wasn't much leading up to Lucy and Zach's relationship. Zach goes from thinking of Lucy as a sister, to purposing his love to her. They never talk about liking each other or dating or anything to show that they both have feelings for each other. They go from friends to engaged. The relationship kind of rubbed me the wrong way, because Lucy is questioning her feelings for Zach throughout the whole story, but yet she still marries him for the sake of her baby. The whole relationship was just strange and didn't sit well with me.

Lucy getting raped and then easily moving on with her life also bugged me. Everyone, including Lucy's foster parents and Zach act like it wasn't a big deal. No one got angry or sad, they were all calm and accepting of it.

I felt like a lot of things got swept under the rug, for the sake of the story.

But, to put some positive into this review, I did enjoy reading about Lucy trying to break the curse and her family history. This is what kept me reading to the end.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 18 May, 2012: Finished reading
  • 18 May, 2012: Reviewed