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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars
Moves you right along, if you can ignor the details,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sins of Silence (Paperback)
The story was good and the setting was engaging. However, a liveaboard would either keep her boat ship shape and ready for heavy sailing (or risk having a cabin full of water or trashed ... maybe that's why she never bothers to clean up?) or she would keep it in the moorage. How many coffee mugs does she keep aboard a tight liveaboard that she can repeatedly scrounge up? The adoption plot is well reasoned and well done. However, her daughter is home for days and Kellie can't even be bothered to lift the phone to call and hear her voice. Then, heaven forbid she should be an hour early to here sister's home Christmas Eve to spend extra time with her child! No wonder the kid is looking for her birth mother. The psychiatric social worker goes from the term "labile" to the more 'layman friendly' term "loose boundaries." The later is used more often when trying to be vague than the former. Etc. etc. Like I said. If you are intimately involved with the things the auther has had lessons on, try to ignore the details. For a first book, this one is great. I look forward to reading more.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good beginning, hope this series gets better,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sins of Silence (Paperback)
There's a lot to enjoy in this story, probably the least of which is the mystery. I liked the main character very much, and there are several passages on sailing that definitely pulled me in.The adoption subplot is the most effective element of this story, where Kellie must deal with feelings of rejection when her adopted daughter decides to search for her birth mother. There are some very good sections on the daughter's need to find her identity, as well as on the tense dynamics among Kellie's extended family. Unfortunately, the mystery is weak, the murderer fairly obvious. While Kellie has good motivation for pursuing an investigation as an amateur, and she meets some very interesting characters along the way, the red herrings were simply not strong enough to distract from the true solution. There are elements of this story that will resonate with me for a long time. I'm looking forward to seeing the next Wilcox book, where hopefully the mystery will improve to match the quality of the subplot and the overall writing.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Light on the mystery, but still enjoyable,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sins of Silence (Paperback)
I enjoyed a lot of things about this story, particularly the adoption subplot. Kellie Montgomery is an attractive heroine, and the scenes with her and her adopted daughter concerning the daughter's decision to search for her birth mother were very moving.The mystery itself is a bit light, but hopefully this will improve as the series progresses.
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