PDF Ebook , by Gregory Ashe
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, by Gregory Ashe
PDF Ebook , by Gregory Ashe
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Product details
File Size: 3993 KB
Print Length: 350 pages
Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
Publication Date: January 31, 2018
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B078FQ4W53
Text-to-Speech:
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#168,232 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
This was a fun read - just like the other one in the series, but it also struggles with the same challenges. There are so many typos it is distracting. Lots and lots. It needs a serious looksee from an editor. Many are wrong words- where a letter is left out creating a new word that does not make sense, or words that appear to be left from rewrites and not deleted. It is obvious what the word should be, so it does not inhibit following the story, but it is distracting. The characters are fun. Sometimes there is some awkward plot-work that does not quite make sense - but the larger schematic holds true and overall it is a fun read. Overall the writing is too good to have such poor editing. It deserves better.
I’ve already purchased books 3 and 4 in the Hazard & Somerset series. I know there are six out there, but I’m not willing to commit that far. Yet. Gregory Ashe writes a really good murder-mystery. He creates interesting characters and sets up tense, puzzling, emotion-filled situations.In this volume he drags out the iconic murder-mystery chestnut, the group of people trapped in a big old mansion during a violent storm. And he OWNS it. Heat and cold and fear are all definite characters in this gripping novel. The plot of this book is as twisted and creepy as its literary grandmother, Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None (1939). Ashe delivers suspense with both barrels (as it were). This is what makes getting the next book essential as soon as you’ve finished one of them.What drives me crazy is the relationship between John-Henry Somerset and Emery Hazard. I love the way Ashe portrays the two men – and how in book 2 he gives us just enough reminders so that we remain fully aware of all the emotional baggage that these two childhood schoolmates from small-town Missouri carry. Hazard is a big brutish muscular cop (except that’s really only the outside). Somerset is all shiny and glamorous – the pretty boy with charm to spare. But he’s covered in tattoos that suggest there’s more to his surface than…surface. That these men have a complex relationship with each other is summed up in three simple facts: Somerset is married; Hazard has a boyfriend; Somerset and Hazard share an apartment.At the end of book 2, I had to sit for a while and take deep breaths. I had to remind myself that the entire timeframe of the first and second books is only a few months, and the third is set just a few weeks after the second. It is not a long time, and these two guys have many years of not speaking to work through. They have serious issues. I suppose I could just rail at the fact that, while we know what they’re thinking, they don’t talk to each other – a device in romance literature (which this book is not) that makes me nuts. Then I have to admit, that it hasn’t been that long, and these two guys have trouble facing their own feelings, much less each other’s. I just have to give them TIME. Damn.Well, I survived the frustration of Josh Lanyon’s Adrian English series, so I guess I can survive this. Question is, do I start right in on book 3, or do I give myself an emotional break? I guess I need to talk to someone about it, ‘cause apparently I have issues, too.
Delightfully written and with delicious prose, fascinating procedural aspects and vivid, engrossing characters, these books make up a (hopefully long) series of novels that are very special, indeed. And -- and, this is both important AND impressive -- while these are not at all "gay novels", they do contain a same-gender subplot that is, unto itself, fascinating, unconventional, and... deeply, wonderfully frustrating. For books that contain no, or very little, sex, of ANY kind, I... let's just say that I don't know how many more cold showers I can take! Unusually, thrillingly, and with evident and accomplished craft, there is; within and around the ever-so-clever, vastly entertaining mysteries, procedural elements, crimes committed and attrrocities solved, a uniquely thrilling subplot that creates enough sexual tension to fill every Alfred Hitchcock movie. Combined. This unconventional sexual interplay, delicious and quite funny, DOES makes me on occasion want to punch both characters involved (who, not coincidentally, always seem to be either punching each other, threatening to, or wanting to). And, these characters are "in love"! Though, inconviently, it IS true that they don't necessarilly share the same... basic romantic proclivities (thus explaining, though not excusing, the rather crass, blue-hued globes mentioned in my headline). Further, the insane, animalistic, and all-encompassing physical compulsion these characters undeniably share, is not merely something of which WE are (sometimes painfully) aware, but is something of which THEY are (sometimes painfully) aware! But, like the regular appearance of a slaughtered song-bird from a demented and cruelly still-functional cuckoo clock, something distracting ALWAYS pops out, just in (OH, NO, PLEASE) time. Or, there is a mysterious knock from a locked-from-within door. The suddenly ringing of a distant, unplugged phone. The emergenge of either a serial killer or a killer blonde ex-wife. SOMETHING always keeps these characters from fulfilling their fated, destined trajectory. Diverting both their attentions and their INtentions. All the while, thankfully, these books are hugely entertaining, and wildly enjoyable. I am looking very forward to the third in the series which, unfortunately, Mr. Ashe doesn't appear to have finished writing. Oh, well. Something this good is well worth waiting for. So, I shall sit. Waiting. Like a cook both eagerly and anxiously waiting for the indicator stuck into the breast of a Thanksgiving turkey to POP. When, finally, the third book arrives, I am SURE the balls hit repeatedly and endlessly over the ping pong net, in it's incessant, mysterious volley, will CONCLUDE! Result, finally, with a display of orgiastic fireworks uncommon at the conclusion the even the most triumphantly won ping pong match! As much as I love these books, if I, upon reaching the conclusion of book number three, find that the "game", always being played in and around the grotesque murders and ultimately successful investigations, has NOT reached it's climax, I may well (metaphorically, of course) put a bullet in my head! So, hurry, Mr. Ashe! Write! I am so incredibly, so throbbingly, ready!
Such a disappointment. I thought that there would be some interesting character development. I was excited to read the second in the series, but it failed miserably. It only got a bit interesting after I read 60% of the book. The first half was all about a dinner who-dun-it party which was boring and who cared about all these other (7?) characters. And when Hazard and Somerset was involved, their behavior was annoying at best. There was just more of the same from the first book. The editing is one of worse I've seen as well, with critical mistakes in character identification as it's worse flaw. I didn't grow to like the characters more, in fact, I grew to like them less, because their annoying habits just continued on and on. I did read the intro to the third book, which sounded like there could be character development and promise, but just at the end of the intro, the two are right back to their annoying and ridiculous behavior. So much promise in the outlines and characters of these stories, but disappointing in the execution.
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