Publisher/Date: Urban Books, May 2013
Genre(s): Romance, Drama
Pages: 354
Website: http://www.simplyskyy.com
Rating:
This is what happened when I opened my mailbox to find FULL CIRCLE waiting there…
Why the jig? Because Full Circle is the fitting end of a series that began with three best friends – Denise, Cooley, and Carmen – at Freedom University, and finalizes the family they’ve made with Lena, Misha and Nic. What happened in the three previous books – Choices, Consequences and Crossroads – comes completely together in Full Circle and is so good it’s worth the back-and-forth these characters experience page after page.
At first reading, it seems as if everybody is living in the past. Lena, mother to 4-year-old Bria, can’t help thinking about the what-ifs with Denise, only because she’s single and hasn’t had a relationship since Crossroads‘ Terrin. Seeing Denise everywhere – on TV, in movies, on gossip blogs with her girlfriend Farih – only furthers the helplessness she feels about her mundane life. Thus the pining begins…
Denise, the once-college basketball star, is rising actress in New York and also a part of a powerful lesbian couple with girlfriend/model Farih. Dubbed the black Portia and Ellen, their life appears magical, but behind the scenes, Farih is obsessed with reviving her waning career at Denise’s expense. All Farih cares about is being back on top, and it leaves Denise time to wonder why she and Lena couldn’t make it work. Seeing Lena in Atlanta brings those feelings back, and again they circle around one another without landing the plane…
Meanwhile, Cooley is still on the grind as manager to both Denise and Sahara, her long-time girlfriend. Cooley has settled into a great relationship with Sahara, something we never could have predicted based on Cooley’s playa mentality three books ago in Choices. Cooley thinks Sahara is the best thing since sliced bread, and would give her just about anything – her heart included. So when something sinister happens to test Cooley’s love, we find out whether Cooley slips back into her trademark way of using sex as a band aid, or trusts that being in love can help you get over the hurt. Let’s just say the growth from Choices Cooley to Full Circle Cooley is tremendous. She’s not the same, and though she slips, she never falls. Skyy truly shows Cooley’s growth as a character.
Things get more complicated when Misha is back in the picture. Cooley’s first girlfriend, the first one she ever gave her heart to, is back hanging with the Freedom University crew, still married with a husband and son. There are so many things she had to give up to be married – her education, her career, her dreams, lesbian pussy – that she wonders if it’s all worth it. Her husband is stifling her in the worst way, but this is the life she wanted when she left Cooley, right? Right?
Back in Memphis, Carmen is set to walk down the aisle to Nic, her hardworking stud. They’ve settled into domesticity, and along with her tedious job as a teacher, Carmen finds her life boring as compared to Denise and Cooley’s fast-paced, sumptuous careers in entertainment. They can afford things Nic can’t, and though she would never trade Nic for anything, her envy could ruin her impending nuptials. All she wants is the fairytale wedding…
I truly enjoyed this book. Full Circle is just a fun, thoughtful read. It’s a page-turner, and definitely something that will get readers talking. The writing, though slack in parts, is some of the best Skyy’s done.
In this final book, she gives readers what they wanted, and if you’re a true fan of Skyy, Full Circle is a fitting end to a series you’ve followed for six years. Skyy built characters we love for better or worse. Despite their many faults, we’ve trailed from undergraduates to grown women, seen their mistakes, yelled at them when they just couldn’t get it right (yes you, Lena!), cussed Cooley every which way, and shed a tear when love brought them together (here’s looking at you, Carmen & Nic). You can’t ask for much better than that.
I wonder what characters Skyy will create next. She’s got a hard act to follow, but I think she can do it.
Reviewed June 2013
all gifs from mariahgifaday.tumblr.com
I’m sad to see them to go. I have some issues with the editing and was baffled by some of the character choices, but I still love everyone of these characters and Skyy is a wonderfully entertaining and engaging writer.
I feel the same way. Her books get me all involved despite their antics. I have a feeling her characters will be back, though.
I haven’t read the book yet as I’m waiting on the hardcopy. My whole beef is why don’t my Sistah’s have their books on e-book, e-read or some kind of internet download when it’s released. You are steady behind the game. Yes many still like a hard copy book but I haven’t read a hard copy book in ages as I enjoy reading on my IPad and Kindle. Please, please my Sistah’s start releasing your books on e-book as well as hard copy. Don’t be behind in the cyberspace game.
The e-book of Full Circle should be released soon. I’m not sure why it wasn’t released at the same time as the hardcopy, but maybe they’re trying to generate more sales for the actual book.
Hey it’s Skyy. I wanted to thank everyone for the kind words. I wanted to address the ebook thing. A lot of publishing companies including my own are treating ebooks the way they paperbacks are treated in comparison to hard back book. Usually the hard copy is released a few months before the paperback hits shelves. Ebooks are the same way as many publishers want to focus on the sale of actual books first before ebooks.
BUT FULL CIRCLE should hit the ebook format within a month. All of my other books are already available in ebook format.
Still no ebook format