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Depth Perception [Hardcover]

Linda Castillo (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Hardcover
  • Publisher: Berkley Books (2005)
  • ASIN: B0014DA2WI
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

More About the Author

Linda Castillo lives in Texas with her husband and is currently at work on her next thriller set in Amish Country and featuring Chief of Police Kate Burkholder. Her first novel in the series, Sworn to Silence, was a New York Times bestseller.

 

Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dark and gritty romantic suspense, September 18, 2006
Depth Perception is a dark, scary and depressing book. It's also very, very good, both in the suspense and the romance department.

Considering the book deals with child killings and that two the dead little boys were actually the sons of the hero and heroine, the book can't be anything but dark. Nat Jennings husband and son were killed three years ago, and after becoming the main suspect Nat tried to kill herself. This left her in a coma for over two years, and when she woke up, she discovered something had altered in her mind. She periodically has "fits", in which she writes messages from her dead son, Kyle. And Kyle is telling her his murderer has killed other children, children whose deaths everyone thinks were accidents.

One of those children Kyle mentions is Nick Bastille's son, who drowned while Nick was in prison after being set up by his former partner. Nick escaped Bellerose as soon as he could, and had made it big in New Orleans, but now he has nothing, so he returns to his father's farm in the town he hasn't seen in 18 years.

When a strange woman approaches him and tells him his son didn't die accidentally, but was murdered, Nick's first reaction is to get angry. Where does this woman get off, telling him that? But Nat soon proves to him that she does have a psychic connection with her son, and she and Nick join forces to try to find the murderer.

Both Nick and Nat are very well done characters, two very damaged people who, nonetheless, manage to find immense strength inside themselves. And it takes lots of strength to even be in Bellerose, especially for Nat, because this is a town full of people who think she killed her husband and son and who don't hesitate to punish her for it. This is a truly awful place for them to be in, with corrupt police harassing them and powerful people (including Nat's former father- amd brother-in-law) making their lives hell. I've read plenty of books in which one of the characters puts him or herself in a similar position and I usually just want to scream at them to just leave, why on Earth are they in that disgusting town with those disgusting people? Think Linda Howard's After the Night, for instance. I enjoyed the book, but I never really bought that Faith would put herself through the awful experience of moving back to that small town just to investigate the disappearance of that guy who meant nothing to her.

In the case of Depth Perception, I never had that feeling. Nat started out the book as someone who was completely empty, except for a burning need to see justice done and her son's murderer punished. And Nick, while not damaged to the level that Nat was, was pretty desperate, too, especially once he accepts that what happened to his son wasn't an accident. This all justified that they wouldn't immediately hightailed it out of there. And I really liked that they don't decide to stay in Bellerose at the end of the book, once the truth comes out. I would have liked it better if I could have seen them rubbing their innocence in those judgemental people's faces, but all right, I see why Castillo would leave things where she left them.

In spite of the frustration of seeing Nat and Nick battle against unhelpful police and vengeful neighbours, I really liked the investigation aspect of the book, especially because the psychic element of it was intriguing and very satisfyingly done. I especially liked that there was no "am I going crazy" wonderings on Nat's part. By the start of the book, she has already dealt with the doubts and has very logically managed to prove to herself that she's not just writing things down that she already knew. This means that when she convinces Nick, they are able to use her psychic abilities logically and do the best they can with them to help their cause and find the villain.

And speaking of the villain, I thought that he wasn't particularly subtly drawn. I mean, we do get some insight into why he became what he became, and I did like that he wasn't just someone who was evil just because he wanted to be evil, but the whole thing about his childhood was a bit over-the-top. The final confrontation was well done, though.

As I mentioned above, this is romantic suspense, and the romance very definitely does not get overwhelmed by the suspense. After only a couple of pages, seeing just how grim the story was going to be, I wondered if the romance wouldn't feel inappropriate. Well, it didn't, even though it was quite a steamy one, too. I think what I liked best was how there was an element of healing in it, how it was a way for them to console each other. But, and this is important, it wasn't all it was. It wasn't just healing, and I bought that these two were going to be together after a while, and I appreciated that we didn't get some kind of saccharine epilogue showing them deliriously happy. What we got was just perfect, and went well with this very good book.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good read., February 28, 2005
Two people, both falsely accused of crimes, find each other in Depth Perception. Fresh out of jail, Nick Bastille comes home to try and make a new life for himself, but innocent or not, he still has the shadow of crime looming over him, as well as the grief resulting from his son's death while he was in jail. Nat Jennings never served prison time for the crime she is believed to have committed, killing her child and husband, but she did spend two years in a coma after grief drover her to try to kill herself. Upon waking, she realizes she has a gift, to somehow automatically write words her son sends from beyond. The child's message is chilling, whoever killed him also killed Nick's son, and is going to kill again.

*** Now, these two lost souls must work together to stop a killer from striking again. This is a fast paced read with sympathetic, scarred characters built on an intriguing concept. Though the romance is more of a background element, it does add depth to an engrossing story. ***
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Read, January 27, 2005
Nat Jennings has returned to Bellerose, Lousianna after three years. Her husband and son were murdered three years ago, Nat was arrested for the murders and although she was not indicted she tried to kill herself. She was in a coma for 2 and 1/2 years. So it is like it happened only 6 months ago to her. She has come home to find the killer. Hated and scorned by her in-laws and the community she struggles to find the courage to go on.

Nick Bastille has come home after 18 years. The last 6 spent in prison for an arson he did not commit. His son drowned 2 years ago. He has returned to try to reconcile with his father who has alsheimers and come to grips with the pain of the loss of his son.

Since Nat woke up she has been receiving messages from her son Kyle, in the form of automatic writing. According to Kyle, Nick's son Brandon was murdered by the same person who killed him and his father. Nat must convince a hurting father that his son was murdered. And that there will be more murders. As her foretelling proves true Nick and Nat join forces to stop a madman.

Although I enjoyed the read if you think about it you will know who the killer has to be very quickly. Even though it is obvious it is still a good read.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
NICK BASTILLE STEPPED OFF THE GREYHOUND BUS, hefted the duffel onto his shoulder, and pulled in a deep breath of air that reeked of stagnant water, sun-baked foliage, and day-old armadillo roadkill. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Nick Bastille, Alcee Martin, Nat Jennings, Ricky Arnaud, Travis Ratcliffe, Elliott Ratcliffe, New Orleans, The Blue Gator, Matt Duncan, Mike Pequinot, Hunt Ratcliffe, Baton Rouge, Chief Martin, Gautier Mud Flats, Race Roberson, Sara Wiley, Tammany Parish, Dove Creek, Jesus Christ, Jim Arnaud, The Tropics, Brandon Bastille, Eddie Flatter, Pelican Island Road, Rusty Burke
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