Debbie Cassidy
Auteur de Reaper Unexpected
Séries
Œuvres de Debbie Cassidy
Demon Gambit (Demons of Morningstar, #2) 6 exemplaires
Demon Gate (Demons of Morningstar Book 3) 5 exemplaires
Insidious Monsters (New Blood: Eldritch Blues #2) 3 exemplaires
Holidays Between the Sheets A Reverse Harem Anthology of Festive Scenes that Get to the Point (2018) — Auteur — 3 exemplaires
The Stone Initiation (Gargoyles of Stonehaven, #1) 2 exemplaires
Dragon War (Dragon Guard #4) 2 exemplaires
Legends of the Damned: A Collection of Edgy Urban Fantasy and Paranormal Romance Novels (2017) — Auteur — 2 exemplaires
Ancient Monsters (New Blood: Eldritch Blues, #4) 1 exemplaire
Dragon Guard : The Complete Series 1 exemplaire
Righteous Monsters 1 exemplaire
When Monsters Rise (The Monsters Among Us) 1 exemplaire
The Yaga Legacy 1 exemplaire
For the Hunt (For the Blood #4) 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- England
- Lieux de résidence
- Bedfordshire, England, UK
Membres
Critiques
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Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 87
- Aussi par
- 2
- Membres
- 545
- Popularité
- #45,748
- Évaluation
- 3.9
- Critiques
- 50
- ISBN
- 37
- Langues
- 4
My main problem with this book is the crude plot steering. It makes use of a lot of lazy and very transparent plot devices to make things happen as needed.
The main offences are emotional and impulsive decisions, stupidity to the point of tstl by multiple characters, incredibly contrived and unlikely good/bad luck, and just outride illogical conclusions.
Larger groups act not like collections of individuals but like two-dimensional blobs which all homogenously jump to conclusions to stoke the drama and raise the stakes. Keyword witchhunt. Yea, this is a real dynamic that can lead to catastrophic mob justice but it doesn't happen constantly with every possible demographic every single time a group of people larger than 5 comes together and go from 0 to riled-up mob in a few moments almost every time. It feels like the average IQ in this world is at room temperature. (Yea, I know that doesn't technically make sense because IQ is defined by the average but who cares.)
There seems to be no depth to any of the motivations of any relevant character. This only became apparent in this second book because almost everything was still shrouded in mystery in the first one.
It still manages to keep to its pre-planned consistent plot line but the attention to detail around it, which made it feel so much more natural, is missing.
The MC exhibits more and more of this typical shounen anime hero "I have to save everyone" personality that I just can't stand. This is more a personal dislike than something objectively bad judging by how many people eat this shit up. I am fine with fundamentally believing in the good in people but I also believe in common sense and if the former supersedes the latter I get frustrated fast.
Tbh I believe she shouldn't be employed by the IEPEU at all and fully agree with the judgement of whoever dissuaded her from retaking the exam thingy in the first book. If you really look at all her involvement she always either stumbles into things on pure accident or is deliberately being pulled in by the perpetrator. The only thing she is really good at is being lucky and surviving the shit that is being thrown at her as well as being born special and therefore being interesting to important people. She rarely accomplishes anything at all on her own merit beyond her genetics.
She isn't stupid or incompetent in general but she just isn't good enough to justify the importance, status and level of involvement that is being bestowed on her.
I will continue with the series in the hopes it might get better again as the author is clearly able to do better than this and because I am somewhat caught by her intriguing origins.… (plus d'informations)