Add this copy of Lori to cart. $17.91, good condition, Sold by Jenson Books Inc rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Logan, UT, UNITED STATES, published 1981 by Fleming H. Revell Company.
Add this copy of Lori to cart. $18.96, good condition, Sold by ThriftBooks-Atlanta rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Austell, GA, UNITED STATES, published 1981 by Fleming H. Revell Company.
Add this copy of Lori to cart. $18.96, good condition, Sold by ThriftBooks-Reno rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Reno, NV, UNITED STATES, published 1981 by Fleming H. Revell Company.
Add this copy of Lori (the Living Hope Library Series) to cart. $50.20, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 1994 by John Benton Books.
Hopefully this isn't the way actress Lauren Hutton got started...
17-year-old Lori Hutton has never had the perfect life. Her mother doesn't even appreciate her once she's got her driver's license and can drive licenseless Mom around on all her errands. As the story opens, we're on the road with Mrs. and Ms. Hutton just as Lori seems determined to speed them into oblivion--or into finding out whether her mother really gives a d*** whether she lives or dies. Because she really doubts that her mother does care. She doubts it even more in the grisly aftermath, which eventually brings the answer gushing out of dear old Mom!
It's not the right answer, and now that it's out, where can life and "the Hutton family" go from here? Nowhere good, it seems. Lori certainly takes a severe(ly wrong) turn that lands her in the midst of an even worse existence than her homelife was. There's a possibility that if she WANTED to go back "home," she would not be welcomed back, but then there's the usual lack of options. Lori is in danger of not actually being able to recognize something genuinely good when it turns up...in danger of not believing anything good could ever happen to her or that she could make anything good happen in her life. How could she be convinced otherwise--and what good things could life hold for her?
Things get so intense--and are so intensely depicted, that you might well wonder, too. For instance, what's with the cover? It looks like Lori is really "into" her whole bad-but-glamour-girl lifestyle and although she has met a "sugar daddy," she's not quite ready to pack in the excitement--even for the happy homelife she has always wanted and deserved but never had. Is that the case?