4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
TV competition and hot air balloons, October 11, 2004
Regan Reilly, P.I. in L.A., gets a call from Danny Madley, an old school friend, requesting she fly to Las Vegas to help him out. He is producing a pilot for a reality TV show featuring three married couples. They have all had some problems in their marriages but say they want to make it work. They are vying for a chance to renew their vows in a wedding-cake-shaped hot air balloon and win one million dollars. Apparently things haven't been going very smooth. Many things have happened and he wants Regan to come help him keep any more things from going wrong.
He is in competition with Bubbles who is producing a pilot for a comedy TV show. Unbeknownst to him, she has been having trouble with her actors and things haven't gone smoothly for them either.
Many things continue to happen including Danny's parents arriving only to lose a bag of mail for advice columnists helping on his show. Worse than that, his mother read one of the letters and if the advice columnists don't pay overdue alimony, his pilot might not be finished in time. Since his parents helped cause some of this trouble, they find themselves in deep to help resolve it.
Regan begins to question whether all of the married couples are truly who they say they are. Then there's Roscoe, the man behind the contest of the two pilot shows. He is a real character and Regan doesn't really trust him. She has her boyfriend, Jack who is a New York Detective, checking into their backgrounds.
While I liked this book, first one I've read by this author, it was definitely not your normal mystery. There wasn't any murder. There was some investigation into the various characters, but not the normal investigation to solve a crime or murder.
I found this book to be an easy read and enjoyed the story line as it was different than anything else I have read. Even with many characters, I felt the author did a good job of describing them so that I was able to keep everyone straight. I recommend this book.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Ugh, November 25, 2004
I picked up this book at a bookstore because I needed a book to read on a 6 hour flight and had already read all the Mary Higgins Clark novels available. Hoping that writing talent was genetic, I picked up this book. Quite frankly, it made me want to jump out of the plane. MARY HIGGINS CLARK FANS: do NOT assume that just because CHC is the daughter of a brilliant writer that she is a brilliant writer herself, because her books are shallow and awful. Terrible plot, terrible storytelling, and the "mystery" isn't mysterious at ALL.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
One of the WORST books I have EVER read, October 31, 2008
Wow. This is one of the all time worst books I have read in the 24 years since I learned to read. I couldn't figure out how to give this book no stars at all, but I would have. The plot is bad. The characters are bad. The book is in third person from Regan's point of view, but you hear from her so rarely, and she is so unimportant to the plot, that she might as well not be there at all. I didn't care about any of the characters, and never believed that these were actual people, since they never acted like any real person would ever act. Character development and plot were so bad that every mention of a new character or "clue" was painfully obvious and seemed forced. The whole balloon thing was one of the lamest bases for a novel ever. Even the names of the characters seemed ridiculous and obviously made up. Aunt Agony and Uncle Heartburn? Alice Mars Jupiter? Seriously? The "resolution" at the end was a total farce. I didn't find anything about this book to be funny, let alone "light and quirky" as indicated on the jacket. Well, not ha-ha funny, anyway. Was this book published solely on the basis of her mother's success? My only theory to explain Carol's success is that people pick up a book seeing "Higgins Clark" and think they are getting one of her mother's mysteries, because that's what happened to me.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No