Anonymous wrote:I agree it was way too far fetched. I enjoyed the beginning, but the ending was too unbelievable.
I'm reading Pretty Girls by Karin Slaughter right now and I feel the same about this book.
I need to believe that the story can actually happen in order to enjoy the book.
Anonymous wrote:Agree. I like a long book but this one felt unnecessarily tortured for both mysteries. And then they were just both solved kind of abruptly, with previous leads/clues abandoned. I was really into it and then put off at the end.
Anonymous wrote:How do publishers decide to promote mediocre books so heavily? This book is everywhere right now - they clearly sent a lot of early copies out and then made a BOTM deal. It's front and center at lots of bookstores.
From the NYTimes review:
I wish Moore had painted the reprehensible Van Laars with more nuance; villains are better when we can see ourselves in them, after all. A few red herrings fall away without resolution, and there are some less-than-convincing details. Would an adolescent from Albany, no matter how sophisticated, really be into punk rock in the summer of 1975, a year before the Ramones released their first album and the Sex Pistols put out their first single? Would an old New York family like the Van Laars, with all the ancestral prejudices that implies, really be so entangled, personally and professionally, with the Irish Catholic McLellans?
I wish Moore had painted the reprehensible Van Laars with more nuance; villains are better when we can see ourselves in them, after all. A few red herrings fall away without resolution, and there are some less-than-convincing details. Would an adolescent from Albany, no matter how sophisticated, really be into punk rock in the summer of 1975, a year before the Ramones released their first album and the Sex Pistols put out their first single? Would an old New York family like the Van Laars, with all the ancestral prejudices that implies, really be so entangled, personally and professionally, with the Irish Catholic McLellans?
Anonymous wrote:Agreed it was too far-fetched. And the "bad" people were too bad - no redeeming qualities at all, very flat characters, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Agreed it was too far-fetched. And the "bad" people were too bad - no redeeming qualities at all, very flat characters, IMO.