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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vigilantes at their best!!!
Fern Michaels does it again, just when you think the series might end, she comes up with another twist!!! If you like action, mystery, suspense, romance and comedy all wrapped up into one, this series is for you!!!! Anxiously awaiting the next book of this series.
Published 13 months ago by hillbillychic

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Deja Vu for me too...will these people ever grow up??
Nineteenth in the Sisterhood romance-suspense series about seven former fugitives and their friends and lovers.

My Take
I suspect Michaels is feeling the need to shake things up with the breakups she has engineered in this installment. Even Elias is wondering if he's letting Nellie down. I must say it's about time she had the boys rebel against the women's...
Published 1 month ago by K. D. Davie


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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vigilantes at their best!!!, January 3, 2011
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Fern Michaels does it again, just when you think the series might end, she comes up with another twist!!! If you like action, mystery, suspense, romance and comedy all wrapped up into one, this series is for you!!!! Anxiously awaiting the next book of this series.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Deja Vu, January 17, 2011
By 
V. Boynton (Sharpsburg, GA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I continue to love reading about the Sisterhood. I feel like I am part of the excitement. All of my friends love the books too.
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7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars sisterhood series is super, January 5, 2011
I love this series. I love all the people in it,but most of all I love Myra and Anna. Please keep this series going.
Deja Vu Is the 19th book in this series.
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5.0 out of 5 stars the beginning of the end, February 21, 2012
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What a way to begin the gathering of all the evil things the sisters conquered. A little of this and a little of that with a desire to finally set things straight.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Deja Vu for me too...will these people ever grow up??, January 6, 2012
Nineteenth in the Sisterhood romance-suspense series about seven former fugitives and their friends and lovers.

My Take
I suspect Michaels is feeling the need to shake things up with the breakups she has engineered in this installment. Even Elias is wondering if he's letting Nellie down. I must say it's about time she had the boys rebel against the women's autocracy!
Unsurprisingly, the ladies are absolutely clueless as to why the boys don't like being treated like idiots who will come when called. Sure, it's always fun to get some role reversal, but this is just obnoxious.

The ladies are being practical this time around. Instead of disappearing to the ends of the Earth and never speaking to each other, they have scheduled regular Sunday dinners where they all get together.

I still find it so tedious to read everyone's conversations. Hasn't Michaels ever been told that adults don't have to act like children?? I feel like I'm reading about middle schoolers. The whole high school reaction toward Annie's "date" with Fergus was just embarassing. Do adult women really act like that?? Or that she could simply write thoughts instead of having everything be a conversation. And, please, get `em off whatever speed you have on them.

Bert and Jack are unsure as to what their next career path will be as they dither about taking over Lizzie's old offices or taking up their old positions what with the FBI making noises about Bert coming back and Jack's old boss hoping he will return.

Would someone please explain to me why the Washington Post would suddenly start running front page articles about the Red Hat club?? Sure, they want to stir up lots of interest and get a large crowd to smoke out Jellicoe but surely it would seem rather suspicious to a man supposedly as astute as Jellicoe that a newspaper he already suspects of being part of the Sisterhood that suddenly starts running articles about something that really belongs in a Lifestyle or Human Interest section is suddenly on the front page AND there just happens to be a Red Hat event in his neighborhood?

Oh yeah, it makes sense to me. The FBI, a DA, two reporters, and some guy are all gonna show up in some old lady's neighborhood and question the postman about the same issue.

Why would the president go through all the hassle of showing up at Kathryn's birthday party in Las Vegas just to say "Happy Birthday"? Why not stay at least for a piece of cake?!?

The Story
It's having too much time on her hands that inspires President Martine Connor with her breakthrough idea for catching Hank Jellicoe. An idea that filters back to the Sisterhood through Elias after the President requests his attendance at the pivotal meeting between the FBI, the CIA, and Homeland Security.

In between plotting the downfall of Hank Jellicoe--I'm not sure if they're intending to show up the agencies or simply ensure Jellicoe going away behind bars, the ladies are plotting to celebrate Kathryn's birthday while steering Bert onto the right way of handling his lady of the road.

Part of the ladies' plot to cancel Jellicoe's free ride is the research into his background and several more important, unknown facts arise: a brilliant young reporter who suddenly disappears from the scene and discovering the whereabouts of Jellicoe's ex-wife and daughter.

Bert and Charles know that Jellicoe will have multiple identities and safe houses and it's simply a matter of applying deductive reasoning as they slowly suss out each hiding place.

The Characters
Myra and Charles seem to have reconciled while Kathryn and Bert are having a troubled patch. Maggie is finding that she's not sure she wants to be engaged to Ted anymore and Abner is looking quite attractive to her--probably because he told her to `eff off. Annie may have started something with Fergus Duffy from New Scotland Yard.

President Martine Connor is finally getting off her duff and giving the heads of the CIA, the FBI, and Homeland Security an ultimatum about finding Hank Jellicoe. She also adopts Cleo, a German shepherd being retired from the military canine unit. Jack and Nikki, Harry and Yoko, and Joe and Alexis seem okay. Cornelia "Nellie" and Elias Cummings provide this particular story's kickstart. Isabella is starting up her own architect's office; I don't know what happened to the one she started in Lethal Justice.

Hank Jellicoe is also Professor Simon Jordan--the real professor was probably murdered by Hank; he's also Bertha Tolliver who drives a lovely old baby blue Cadillac. Marsha Olivettie is Hank's ex-wife and, hoo-boy, has she got a story to tell!

The head of the FBI is Yantzy; Span is the CIA head--turns out the CIA "burned" Jellicoe; and, Don Frank heads up Homeland Security. Virgil Anders was an up-and-coming reporter pulling together too much information on Jellicoe; now he's a crippled hermit looking for ways to bring him down. Tim, Bart, and Stella are fellow hackers Abner taps for help in hacking into the Witness Protection Program.

Avery Snowden has a cameo appearance. Amy Blandenburg may be Ted's new love interest.

The Cover
The cover is lovely and peaceful with its boardwalk snaking along the beach from the pair of Adirondack chairs back to the house with a cool sunrise just peeking over the horizon. What it has to do with the story, I haven't a clue.

I'm thinking that the title refers to how bored the ladies are with their legal existence and how happily they dive back into their old felonious habits. A bit of Déjà Vu all over again.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Love This Series, December 29, 2011
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Love this series from Fern Michaels. Have read the whole series, and can't wait when a new one comes out.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Lame, December 3, 2011
Trite, boring book - my first free loaner on my new Kindle Fire from Amazon. None of the others offered seem much better.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing, October 26, 2011
I picked this book up at my local library. I have read Fern Michaels books before and liked what I had read. This book, however, lost my interest almost immediately. I haven't read "The Sisterhood" series, so I am not familiar with it at all. Had I known this was a book written for a "series" I wouldn't have wasted my time. I stopped reading after 50 pages - too many characters to keep up with, etc. etc.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Sisterhood rules!, April 30, 2011
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I'll be sad that the series is ending, but all of these books are amazing! You'll be so glad you read this, and any (or all) of the others in the series!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Love the Sisterhood Series!, April 15, 2011
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I'm almost finished with this book and Fern Michaels is doing a wonderful job with this Sisterhood series. They are like family that I'm checking in on to keep up with what's going on in their lives. Just a touch of romance, a touch of mystery with a little smattering of suspense. I can't wait to get finished and started on the next one.
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Deja Vu (Sisterhood Series)
Deja Vu (Sisterhood Series) by Fern Michaels (Audio CD - January 4, 2011)
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