4.5 out of 5 stars
On Amazon UK
On Amazon.com
On Goodreads
How I discovered this book: Amazon browse
In a Nutshell:
I love some Stephen King (The Stand, Misery, Thinner, IT before the bit at the end with the daft spider), but am not a massive fan, finding some of them unnecessarily long with too many daft spiders, etc, but that fabulous cover made me look twice.
Jamie Conklin can see dead people. As he explains, not like in the Bruce Willis film; he sees them just after they die, for a short period of time until they fade away. During this time he can talk to them - and once dead, they never lie.
Jamie lives in New York with his mother Tia, a literary agent. He was a young child when he first discovered he could see the dead; terrified of this at first, he learns to live with it. The story takes a darker turn when others want to exploit his gift for their own ends.
Of course Mr King is a master storyteller and this had me pretty much glued to the page all the way through; it's gripping, funny, sinister and relatable, all at once, and coasts along nicely, always with the hint that something much, much worse is going to happen. I enjoyed the whole New York vibe, though I was disappointed by the ending - it just sort of stops. Like King couldn't think of a really good way to end it, so he wrote the last big action scary bit then wrapped it up. There's a bit of a twist at the end, but it doesn't have that much bearing on the story. It's a good length for a quick, couple of days read - about 230 pages - and a book I looked forward to getting back to each time. If it'd had a worthy ending, I'd have given it 5*.
OK, another one on the list, Terry. ;)
ReplyDeleteOh, you'll love it, Olga! :)
DeleteI'm not a Stephen King fan except for the book he wrote on writing. I find his books twisted, and yes, scary. Not my cup of tea, I'm afraid.
ReplyDeleteI find that when he's good I love him, but not that many are my cup of tea :) Thanks for looking, Noelle! x
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