Friday, 26 August 2022

The Curfew by T. M. Logan


The curfew is a brilliant book with a fantastic twist at the end. The story is about Connor (same name as my son) and his best friend/cousin. The tale itself is a little bit weird, but I'm weird, so it's okay. 

Connor is at a party with friends (and one not friend). His parents get a text saying home, meaning their son has kept to his curfew. Both parents are too tired to check. 

This is one of the parts that didn't gel with me. Through out this book, Connor's father, Andy, comes across over-protective and panicky about their son staying out late. Ain't he 16? I used to stay out all night at 14+, no one was that concerned. I let my kids rock off to all hours of the next morning in their late teens. Never gave a curfew. 

Back to the story. 

The parents think Connor is asleep in his room. He is a teen, so he'll sleep all day. Early morning, Andy sees his nephew left the house in Connor's clothes. Then they get a call from the cops. 

Emily, a girl that Connor is obsessed with, and was at the small gathering after the party, goes missing. Connor is the prime suspect. 


There are other things in this book that seem a little off or easy. But they are minor and don't take away from the enjoyment of the book. 

This story is a cracker. I've read all T. M. Logan's books, and this is right up there with 29 Seconds. 

Recommended


 


Thursday, 21 July 2022

The Circle Bentley Little

 

Finally, a Bentley Little story that doesn't drag on with pages and pages of filler. This book is tight, weird, and fun. Published by Cemetery Dance Pubns; 0 edition (October 1, 2012) and coming in at only 150 pages.
 
This book has it's problems and one of those problems is that nothing is explained. Why is the boy shitting diamonds? Why did he target that family? Get past that and this first story is good. 

First? 

Yes. 

This book has three stories that are intertwined. These stories just end as the next one starts. 

There's a shine at the back of a witches house that is meant to grant wishes but it doesn't instead a creature rips pervert kids to shreds. And a clueless dad looking for his son. he breaks into the witches house (in reality a school teacher), she sees him and watches him and he runs away. 

It is a weird book. 

The publisher lists the book at 150 pages but reviews are 65 pages. Hmm. 

I liked it. 

There was no reasons or answers to the why of the stories. They just ended.

 


 



Friday, 20 May 2022

Make Me & Permafrost (Two mini reviews)


This is a bit different to many Jack Reacher titles. It is overly long, or just seems that way. He teams up with fired (retired) FBI agent, who becomes his partner (in all forms of the word).

The problem I had with this book was the slowness. The action was fast, interesting and the killers on their trail were at times idiots and at other times smart. In all times they failed. The shootout in the hallway gave me pause but over all, this is a decent Jack Reacher novel. 

Much better than what his brother writes. 



 

Overall, this a decent Time Travel book, with an interesting twist and based in Russia. The details are great. The action sudden and enticing but the mistrust between the main characters was infuriating. Maybe that was the point. 

It took a long time for me to warm up to the main character. She wasn't realistic in my eyes. I'm sure other readers loved her. 


 

Sunday, 1 May 2022

The Institute by Stephen King

I stopped at the half way mark. It just went on and on and on. Get on with the story, King. The writing is good. The story had promise. I know that King was building up the characters and giving them lives and so forth. In his book on writing he says to cut the unnecessary. Is he taking his own advice? I think not. 

What's the book about? Kids with super powers basically. A whole bunch of miniature sized Carrie. The story centers around Luke, a child prodigy. Sometimes, stuff around his moves a little. This is noticed by a group of people and Luke is kidnapped. His parents are killed the same night. 

At the institute, he is surrounded by many others who, like him, have powers. Tests are performed on these kids. Child abuse tests. But they are rewarded with coins which they can use for stuff like cigarettes and booze. Nothing is off limits.  

My biggest pet peeve was all the Trump bashing. Leave politics at the door, man. I don't add NZ politics into my books. 

And I'm not the only one to believe politics should be left at the door. The first two top reviews from Amazon:






   

Friday, 8 April 2022

I Follow You by Peter James


I haven't read Peter James for a long time. I remembered the name from one of my favorite books: Host. A novel about a man uploading his consciousness into a computer. When he started writing crime, I wasn't all that interested. Now, that I write thrillers (switching from a life-time of horror novels), I attended Thrillerfest hosted by ProWritingAid. It was a massive one week event and it was all online. 

Peter spoke a little about "I Follow You". I went to Audible and snagged a copy. All these months later, I finally had a chance to devour it. 

I shit you not, this is a damn good book. It tells the tale of obsession and madness. Marcus Valentine is a top obstetrician, married and the father of three small children. He seems to have it all, until one day, he almost hits a woman whom reminds him of a jilted teenage lover. 

Could it really be her? 

She shows up at a dinner party he is hosting. Georgie Maclean is a personal trainer and runner. She is 41 and is pregnant. A miracle she thought would never happen. Marcus's obsession takes off from there. 

And the tension ratchets up from there. It is a tad slow in the beginning building characters and scenery. It slows (a little) at the 3/4 mark when her fiancĂ©e is in hospital. One of the best things in this book, is how Peter James slowly builds up the growing obsession. Marcus truly believes he should be with Georgie. 

A damn good read. 


Friday, 11 March 2022

The kind worth killing by Peter Swanson

A devious tale of psychological suspense so irresistible that it prompts Entertainment Weekly to ask, “Is The Kind Worth Killing the next Gone Girl?”

 Peter Swanson’s new mystery, The Kind Worth Killing, is intricately plotted, fast-paced, and made up of tightly constructed scenes.

Chilling and hypnotically suspenseful … could be an instant classic.” -- Lee Child, author of Personal

And many, many, more.


My question: Did these reviewers read the book?


This book was a paperback read for me, which is unusual as I normally prefer audio books, but I stumbled upon it in a second hand bookstore. I snatched it up. Read Lee Child's comment and Sunday Mirror claiming: Nerve-shredding. 

Peter Swanson, never heard of him. However, I like these kinds of books (as I've started writing them), so, I bought it. 

The reviewers are spot on, for the first half of the book. It might have worked if Swanson haven't done a massive U Turn. It was a surprise, and he me, the end of the book. I hate it when authors pull this kind of shit. From that point, I kept reading to see how it ended and it was good. And the letter from her father...what a killer ending. 

Basically, the story is about Ted, a very wealthy man, who discovers his wife is cheating on him with a house builder. And he wants to kill her. But he is a normal dude and in a bar in an airport, he meets Lily, and spills his guts to her. 

Together, they come up with a plan to kill his wife and her lover and they plan how to get away with it. She'll help him. 

Lily knows what she is talking about. 




Recursion by Blake Crouch


A number one bestseller. 

The story concept is great, the execution however was not good. What was with the spiritual guys explaining science in such a manner?  

Normally, I love Black Crouch books from Wayward Pines to Dark Matter, but this book was very confusing to follow in Audio form, so maybe it works better in print form. I gave it several hours but couldn't bare finishing it. Pity. The concept was bitching. 


 

book reviews

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