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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Well-written, convoluted plot: Was this really a mystery?,
By Prometheus (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Echo (Paperback)
Ms. Walters is a wonderful writer and I've enjoyed all of her books. This one is quite different than her previous novels. In fact, I'm not sure it was a "classical" mystery or a social commentary on a variety of subjects (class, family, mental illness, the homeless, homosexuality, male-bonding, etc.). It's a well-written book, but the mystery was somewhat convoluted. About a third of the way into the book, I no longer cared about the mystery. I had a difficult time with Terry: He was far too precocious for 14 years old. I had a bigger problem believing that Terry could recite, verbatim, the conversations he had with Billy Blake; especially those reminisces that dealt with poetry and the "meaning of life" passages. My favorite character: Lawrence. He appears briefly, but it's a wonderful characterization. I loved the British slang, as well. One reason I like Ms. Walters: all of her characters, even her protagonists, are flawed individuals with their own set of phobias, problems, and issues. Will I read her, again? Absolutely.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
What is irresistible about these books,
By Joyce L. Tompsett "American expat returned" (San Francisco for now) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Echo (Paperback)
Walters' books remind me a bit of Shakespeare's tragedies if we had come in on the story near the end. We work backwards to find out how they have gotten to this wretched point -- and we usually do meet them at rock bottom -- and then we watch them rise up just a little to grab one more time at their humanity before succombing to their ultimate fate.Walters fascinates me because she starts with a cast of characters who appear to be generally awful people, or jerks. They aren't people we like, nor do we want to like them. And then she unfolds their stories for us, and forces us -- and her other characters -- to look behind the veneer at the more complete individual. Especially when we don't want to. Barry is a good example in this book. While we are sympathetic with his emotional crippling due to life circumstances, we still dislike him. At the same time, Barry is human, and believable, and so we find ourselves drawn, if a bit squeamishly, into his misshapen life. I place Walters with Elizabeth George, J. Wallis Martin, and Ruth Rendell as writers who write dark, psychological mysteries (and to some degree Laurie King's Kate Martinelli stuff fits here too.) They are neither light, nor comfortable, but they do satisfy on a deeper level.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Trying too hard,
By AnnaKarenina (St Petersburg, of course) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Echo (Paperback)
Snappy and interesting in many places, The Echo's flaws make it all the more disappointing. The missing persons based plot starts well but gets more and more contorted until you simply can't follow and don't even care who was pretending to be who to whom and when and why. A couple of the main good guy characters are either totally unbelievable and/or totally off. A 14 yr old sexually & emotionally abused runaway found squatting in a homeless men's doss house transforms into a wise,supportive, insightful companion who quotes and analyses William Blake. A repressed homosexual who publicly jerks off in people's gardens is just plain creepy and unlikeable. The whole atmosphere is just bland British mystery, to which the author attempts to give a contemporary edge by the use of bad language and gratuitously coarse supposed homosexual slang, but it doesn't really work. It probably made an OK BBC TV series, but for a book like this is trying to be, read one of the better Val McDermid books, or for that matter pretty much any Ruth Rendell book.
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