No, it really doesn't. I hope the book is helpful ((((x))))
I've just started The Ghost Tree by Barbara Erskine. It's about a woman who returns to Edinburgh after the death of her father, only to find a (not very nice) man living in his house, claiming to be his long-lost son. Whilst there she starts to dream (or have psychic flashes) about the life of her ancestor who lived in Edinburgh three centuries ago. It's engrossing so far
I've just finished two books, strangely, with the same title - but very different.
"Run Away" by the prolific American author Harlen Coben is a pretty typical run-of-the-mill thriller, wouldn't be up there necessarily for a Pulitzer Prize. What he does have going for him is some ingeneous plot twists, usually in the final 50 pages or so.
"Runaway" by Peter May, the Scottish author of the (amongst other) Enzo McLeod crime thriller series, (with a strong French background), is a stand-alone book about 5 Glasgow lads heading for London back in the 1960's to find fame and fortune, and how it all goes terribly wrong. Written in the current day, but with long flashbacks to 1965, it's quite a tour de force of two very different cultures, and an excellent read. Peter May is sometimes not the easiest of authors but this was very readable, and quite a page-turner.