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Showing posts with label Mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mystery. Show all posts

Friday, January 15, 2016

DiSemblance (DiSemblance #1) by Shanae Branham ~ Review


Approx. Pages(reading content/actual pages): ~219/220

Format: e-book

Content: Clean, some psychological conflict
Jason Tanner lives between two worlds. Problem is, only one is real. 
Inside the hologram machine 17-year-old Jason has everything his heart desires, including a digital simulation of his dead mother. While outside the machine, he’s forbidden contact with everyone. Living within the shadow of a serial killer, Jason is captivated by the beautiful girl next door, Boston Manning. Disobeying his father, he secretly cultivates a relationship with her. 
For Boston life is divided into those that have and those that have not. Displaced in a new high school, she is determined to have the life she’s always wanted. But will her choices hijack her dreams and plunge her into the treacherous clutches of a serial killer? 
As an action-packed romantic thriller, DiSemblance is sure to keep you guessing until the very end.
DiSemblance had a pretty action-packed story that was...interesting. I know interesting gets overused a lot. So, what is interesting?

Well, I didn't really have a care for this book until the real crazy starts happening. Just to reiterate the plot, this story provides insight into the perspective of three characters: Jason Tanner, his girlfriend Boston Manning, and Detective Bruce Durante (if i'm not mistaken[if I forget, please forgive me]) during the intense investigation on whom the public of this story knows as "The Comfort Killer." And I shan't leave out the more interesting character of the bunch in my opinion, Isaac Tanner. Don't ask why, he just is.

Jason and Isaac Tanner are two brothers who have basically been away and were denied of the wonders of having real friends or even just doing teenage things, causing them to be socially-inept. Or so I think? Due to their father's, Lloyd, life-long work on an invention of a virtual-reality machine, they've been kept away as a source of protection. The machine is seriously valuable and you can imagine if it fell into the wrong hands, shit is going down. Anyway, I expected awkwardness. I expected an uncomfortable... aura. I just expected something different and I only got that in Isaac. Maybe I was missing something about Jason, maybe there's nothing even wrong with him in the first place. Who knows. *shrugs*

There was a Criminal Minds sort of feel to it. But I wasn't as enraptured by the story as much as I am with the television show. Nonetheless, there were some moments that really had me thinking (between the scenes of Detective Durante and the journal, and the hospital scene when "someone" woke up from a coma), "whoa!" or "oh shit." I had my moments of turning back a few pages just to see if I read correctly. The line between what was real and what was fabricated was present in those short pages, but overall, I wasn't into it until SPOILER (highlight the blank space) the pictures of dead people and the map of Montana surrounding the Tanner's kitchen happens. Not really a spoiler. I just wanted to do it. SIKE. But really. HOW'D THOSE GET THERE HMMM? In any case, the hunt for the killer was a good ride. I wish it was darker, though. I mean, the ending wasn't happy go-lucky or anything. There's Isaac to think of! Poor Isaac. But I guess my expectation of a teen science fiction-y, thriller story was too hyped up that it fell short. And as I said, it's still good. But I wouldn't go back to re-read the first book.

I didn't have any one to root for, except strange Isaac. I could actually care less about the rest of the characters. Again, not to say they suck. They can be pretty badass. But, they just aren't my cup of tea at the moment. And, maybe that makes me tooootally... wierd? Biased? Close-minded? I don't know.

I was given a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
★★★✩✩

Monday, September 14, 2015

Not Without You by Dianne Venetta ~ Review


Approx. Pages(reading content/actual pages): ~233/237

Format: e-book

Content: Clean
Grad student, Lisa Richardson, scours the high country in search of her beloved boreal toad. The amphibian is in danger of extinction, a fate she is determined to change. Single-minded in her focus, Lisa doesn’t realize that she’s being followed by a mysterious stranger. 
Enter McIntyre Walsh. Ex-marine with a heart of gold, this man lives and breathes duty. Protection. Content with his self-exile on a mountaintop in Colorado, he inadvertently witnesses a female hiker in danger, a situation he cannot ignore yet is unable to rectify. When their paths cross, Lisa and Walsh refuse to stray from their avowed goals and carry on—despite the other. 
It isn’t until a killer ramps up his game that both are forced to relent. Battling the rugged terrain of the Rocky Mountains and an undeniable attraction between them, Lisa and Walsh must work together against the odds if they intend to get off the mountain alive.
I believe this is the first book of the Silver Creek series. And when given the time, I may possibly read the rest of Venetta's books. Although stand alone novels have their charm, I would much rather read a continuation of Lisa's and Walsh's story, whether or not there will be more troubles ahead for them, I won't care. I like the characters. So, I'm picky like that :) Anyways, I think this book is very adventurous, and with a side of romance in it, I liked it even more. I might pick this book up again to read if I'm up for it. I felt that the story ended very satisfactory... and happy might I add! A little rushed in the love department in my opinion, but happy nonetheless. The relationship between Lisa and Walsh was a very quick one -- spanning three days in the book, I believe -- but when a connection hits, who am I to say "no way" and to judge?

I really did like the character of McIntyre Walsh as well as Lisa. I must admit, she had her moments in the beginning that irked me a bit, such as her words toward poor non-athletic Dale and her insistence that she could hold her own without help. OH! Lisa is very well capable of holding her own, I get that and admire that. But, I always figure that it's more than alright to just humor someone if they're worried about your safety. Especially if it's coming from your father. Listen to the man! I was warned though, that she was very single-minded in her focus. Otherwise, Lisa grew on me fairly quickly. Walsh, I liked right away.

The battle with the killer in the mountains went by incredibly quick. I really enjoyed the minor suspense from the characters trying to get to safety, their tribulations, and avoiding the bad man altogether, but again, too quick for my taste. I suppose I would have liked to read more about the killer, for him to have more interactions with the characters to add to the tension, or, heck, a POV chapter of him once in a while. But, that's just my preference. I would think that would be interesting to know a bit more about the dangerous man in a more intimate way, by knowing what he's thinking.

I was given a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
★★★★☆