![]() I personally loved the triplets, especially as they simultaneously became darker. It's easy to keep the three personalities separate, even as they all three descend into a sort of maddening obsession with Landry. Webster did an excellent job at writing Scout, Sully, and Sparrow's points of view each triplet is kind of unhinged in their own way and each one responds differently to Landry. I really enjoyed the whole premise, and the deeper we got into the triplet's perspectives, the darker things became. Triple Threat delicately toes the line between what's safe and dangerous, what's innocent and perverse. ![]() As the triplets' past starts repeating itself, Landry finds herself on a rollercoaster of emotions: over her father's moods, her sister's safety, and the boy who seems to have three very different - and very dark - personalities. But then, acting as one, they meet Landry. On a mission to ruin the family that destroyed theirs, Sully, Sparrow and Scout will stop at nothing. The Mannford triplets, however, want to get in. Landry just wants to get her little sister and get out. If only her father didn't keep her like a prisoner, locked in her ivory tower, at the whim of his drunken tantrums. Rich, gorgeous - the world is hers for the taking. ![]() On the surface, Landry Croft's life is perfect. ![]()
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