Dangerously Close
I wish I could say I was disappointed, but I’m really not. I got what I expected to get after reading the first chapter:
A bunch of deus ex machinas tied together and with a nice bow on top starting with Ashley’s blindness.
I was positively surprised that Adams at least appeared to have done her research into blindness. There were two institutions mentioned and the way Ashley and her assistant, Lizzie, behaved rang true to me. Still, reading about spotty vision or hazy peripheral vision made it clear that Ashley wasn’t going to stay blind forever. That didn’t stop me from hoping that the author would surprise me.
There’s a slow build romance with the neighbours, Ashley and Mel, getting to know each other and become friends first. They’re both hiding from the world and trying to learn to cope with their new selves. Ashley at least was being mostly honest with herself, while Mel’s tendency to speak of himself in the third person was understandable but distracting. He had a secret to keep, but it felt more complicated than that; it felt like the character or the author didn’t really know who he was. I think this is why I found the couple’s chemistry lacking.
The writing, I mostly liked. Some plot details like Roamer felt more contrived than others like the initial avoidance of Ashley’s accident and the cause to her temporary blindness as well as the final confrontation. If the characters had acted naturally instead of being driven by plot points, Mel would have told the truth to Ashley before leaving. That would have only shifted the emphasis of their argument spoiler and there wouldn’t have been need for that awkward moment where Ashley recognizes Mel from his picture before ever seeing him spoiler.
I hesitate too mention this because I’m not a native English speaker and I could be completely wrong, but some of the expressions used in the book sounded childish to me. Like Ashley’s comments about something being wowie zowie or aces or her and Mel’s nickname for Paula—Smelly.
The sex scenes did take a good portion of the book when they finally got into bed together, but luckily they weren’t gruelling. Not worst I’ve read, but not the best either. I was glad to see the unprotected sex addressed though I wasn’t very happy with the conclusion either.
If Ashley spoiler hadn’t regained her vision spoiler, I would be giving this book three stars.
2 stars
I received an Advanced Readers Copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley.
Series: Adrenaline Heighs #3
Pages: 322 (paperback)
Publisher: Carina Press
ISBN: 9781426894121
Published: July 23rd 2012
Source: NetGalley
Bad-boy rock star Seger Hughes hit rock bottom after a near-fatal tragedy at his concert. He hates how his life has spun out of control. After changing his appearance and his name, he transforms into a different man: Mel Summers. Now he just needs a place to hide out from rabid fans and paparazzi.
An isolated cliffside mansion is perfect. Ashley Bristol, his only neighbor, is blind—and her assistant is a classical music fan. They have no clue who he really is, but someone else does and she’s waited her whole life to be with him.
Struggling to find her way after an accident that took her sight, Ashley is determined not to feel anything. Yet she gets to know Mel and can’t help falling for him. When her assistant mysteriously disappears, Ashley must rely on Mel more than ever. But then his past comes back to haunt them both, and just when they must pull together to avoid danger, betrayal and lies threaten to tear them apart...
Well I didn't know this one but I think it will stay that way. It's difficult to expect something from a book, we can easily be disappointed.
ReplyDeleteA friend pointed this out to me when I was ranting about another book with a blind main character. I think Blodeuedd posted that rant here too: Sight Unseen was the book.
DeleteYour review doesn't put me off reading this book, even if you only gave it two stars. I like the ingredients and the premise. I just might give it a try. :)
ReplyDeleteTastes vary. I do hope you like the book better than I did.
DeleteWowie zowie sounds weird to me too and I'm American.
ReplyDeleteSo the book sounds kind of meh but still sounds like an interesting premise.
Oh, absolutely. The premise is interesting. I just didn't like the execution of it.
DeleteThe slang sounds like something from Scooby Doobie Doo the cartoon..LOL
ReplyDeletenever heard of this book before . bummr it was not a good reading experience
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry this wasn't a better read. It looked like it had potential.
ReplyDeleteNice review Rameau, glad you liked some parts of it.
ReplyDeleteNot very brilliant then... thanks for sparing me the wasted reading time with this book :)
ReplyDeleteA very nice review, thank you very much. I will make sure I never read this one for the sake of my sanity.
ReplyDeleteI like the blurb, it's a shame it didn't live up to its promise.
ReplyDeleteThank you Rameau! :)
ReplyDeleteWowie zowie??? Who talks like that..no one I know. Steering clear of this one!
ReplyDeletei really like the neon on this cover!
ReplyDeleteLaughing at the wowie zowie and weird nickname. Sounds contrived to me too!
ReplyDelete