Thursday, April 30, 2015

Some of the links in this post are affiliate links. Clicking on a book cover or title will send you to Amazon, and if you happen to purchase the item after clicking on my link, I will receive an affiliate commission, at no extra cost to you.
All opinions still remain my own.

Review: I Can See You by Karen Rose

Title: I Can See You
Series: Karen Rose's Interconnecting Books
Author: Karen Rose
Read copy: Mass Market Paperback
Published: May 1, 2010
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
ISBN: 0446538353
ISBN-13: 9780446538350

WHEREVER YOU GO

Eve Wilson's face was once marred by a vicious assault. Terrified and ashamed, she retreated to the virtual realm where no one could see her. Now, years later, her outer scars faded and inner scars buried, she's fought her way back to the real world, and is determined to help others do the same. Then her test subjects on the addictive powers of the Internet start turning up as "suicides."

WHATEVER YOU DO

Detective Noah Webster is one of the few people who believe the deaths are connected murders. To find the twisted killer, he must rely on Eve. Together, they enter an intoxicating world of alternate identities and secret passions...and find themselves trapped in the fight of their lives.

I CAN SEE YOU


My rating:

A serial killer has started terrorizing the women of the Twin Cities. He stalks them in the virtual world, sets up dates in the real world, follows them home and submits them to their worst fears before killing them. Every murder is staged as a suicide with the woman hanging from a hook in her bedroom, dressed and made-up as a prostitute, her eyes glued open, an overturned stool under her, a pair of red pumps on the carpet.

Detective Noah Webster suspects foul play when a “suicide” looks just like one he’s seen a few weeks back, but the bodies keep on piling. So what is the connection? It all seems to come down to a single woman. Eve Wilson is writing a thesis on therapeutic effects of online gaming onto a subject’s real-life life. Every murdered woman was one of Eve’s test subjects. Still, what is the connection? Does the killer not want for Eve to succeed or is his motive much more sinister?


Hmmm, after a very good book streak, this one came as a slight disappointment for me. The villain was nicely twisted, the pacing good and the suspense wonderful, it was everything else that somehow didn’t work for me.

I disliked Eve from the moment she appeared in the first book, wanted to beat her up in the fourth book, and though she’s come a long way from that whiny, selfish, hateful girl, she still annoyed me. I just couldn’t connect with her, though I couldn’t say the same with her counterpart, Noah.
I actually did miss the romance in this book, what we got were mere glimpses and they were rather cold and generic.

Everything else, apart the villain and “his side” of the suspense arc, seemed put in there in preparation for the next story, and though I love David Hunter and can’t wait to read his book (the “tell her I said hi”-“tell him I said hello” tidbit was so high-school it made me laugh), this aspect of the plot was a little off-putting. I know each and every book in this quasi-series sets the background and characters for the next book, but it was never as obvious as in this case.

It was still a good book, but not as good as I’ve come to expect from Ms. Rose of late.



0 comments:

Post a Comment