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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Like a creeping fog but without the mystery,
By A Customer
This review is from: Collectors: A Novel (Hardcover)
The elegant, hypnotic prose is marred by an utterly unbelievable female main character. The underlying message here seems to be "the victim was asking for it." A nasty, cold little book that will leave the reader dashing out to find something else to read that will take away the lingering aftertaste of this one.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Short but suspenseful thriller!,
By
This review is from: Collectors: A Novel (Hardcover)
We know from the beginning Jean is the type of person who attracts danger, and when she meets Stephen Cain this becomes a fact. I found little to like in either character, and couldn't understand why anyone such as Jean would still want to be around Stephen after he slammed her hand in the car door. However, knowing her past of seeking dangerous situations, maybe it gave her a thrill.Yes, the story was suspenseful in the beginning but seemed to end in a very boring, expected way. If you like predictable stories this one is for you. There wasn't much guesswork here!
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A THRILLER THAT UNFOLDS LIKE A ROMANCE,
This review is from: Collectors: A Novel (Hardcover)
Paul Griner's heroine, Jean, is a fascinating character. Her motives are eccentric, her past is fuzzy (she had "episodes" after a mysterious fire she set with her cousin), she seems to be very beautiful and unapproachable, as if she is holding something back. She meets the even more eccentric Stephen Cain and falls for him, possibly because the games Stephen plays are as dangerous as the childhood games she played with her cousin. They get together on Stephen's sailboat, they have surprising sex, Stephen breaks her hand in her car door and doesn't seem to be sorry. What is intensely menacing about Griner's novel (his first after an also adroit story collection, FOLLOW ME) is that the reader knows something awful is going to happen. Jean learns that Steven is a widower. The distant widower is a popular character in thrillers, but Griner's pacing and the precision of his characters--the precision that is nicely foreshadowed in Jean's trips to the flea market and her conning of pen vendors ("it is all in the eyes")--allows him to slowly display horrific surprises about the motives of both characters. The last pages of the book were extremely well-done and mysterious and filled me with a palpable sense of dread because I cared for Jean. A fast, engaging, and tense read.
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