Photo de l'auteur

Edgar Cantero

Auteur de Meddling Kids

7+ oeuvres 2,475 utilisateurs 172 critiques 4 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Edgar Cantero is a writer and cartoonist from Barcelona. His books are written in Catalan, Spanish, and English. He is the author of "The Supernatural Enhancements" (2014) and "Meddling Kids" (2017). His book "Dormir amb Winona Ryder", won the 2007 Joan Crexells Award. (Bowker Author Biography)

Œuvres de Edgar Cantero

Meddling Kids (2017) 1,501 exemplaires
Le Monde caché d'Axton House (2014) 671 exemplaires
Dormir amb Winona Ryder (2007) 6 exemplaires
Vallvi (2011) 2 exemplaires
Baileys n' Coke (2007) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Best European Fiction 2016 (2015) — Contributeur — 16 exemplaires
Spooky Short Stories — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1981-05-27
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Spain
Pays (pour la carte)
Spain
Catalonia
Catalonia, Spain
Lieu de naissance
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Prix et distinctions
Joan Crexells Award (2007)

Membres

Critiques

Pop culture memories meet Lovecraftian horrors: the kids from Scooby-Doo (sort of) have unfinished business. Their last case just didn't sit right with any of them ... and it's haunted them ever since. They're getting the band back together to close this monstrous case.

A fun read that's just right for the spooky season. The author has a style that you'll either love or hate, prone to heavy use of metaphor, allusion, and other 50-cent words. :D I'd give it 4.5 stars.
 
Signalé
daplz | 105 autres critiques | Apr 7, 2024 |
I need to start by saying I loved Scooby-Doo, mostly because it helped me become a skeptic, and critical thinker. Keep that in mind when you see this review.

The book was written well and very entertaining. The narrator was great and able to give the characters voices and feelings. The story was fun and I enjoyed it. However, it would have been a better book if it didn’t try to associate itself with the Scooby-Doo gang so much, but is also what made me interested in the book in the first place.

I liked the story… I loved SD because there was always some logical explanation, some guy in a mask. If you are hoping for that with this story, get that thought completely out of your mind and just enjoy the book ignoring all the callbacks to the SD tropes.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
philibin | 105 autres critiques | Mar 25, 2024 |
i know people either loved or hated the writing style of this one and i think i'm somewhere in the middle. it was fun!! and i found it engaging. my brand of adhd was never bored because it kept switching it up throughout the paragraph, so i enjoyed it a lot. the plot was also FUN and not at all what i expected when i picked this book up. i'm a huge scooby-doo fan so the characters alone were enough to get me to give it a try and i guess i totally forgot about the summary mentioning Lovecraftian horror bc i was like WHAT!! when we started getting into it.
i liked the idea of andy and kerri and thought how they ultimately end up was sweet. however i'd be lying if i said some of their dialogue/interactions didn't make me cringe- like them more than once being like "Ha ha VULVAS omg babe stoppp ur so funny" and stuff idk it was extremely weird at times. also the little moments discussing transness and gender affirming surgery.....like what was that all about. felt very waka_flaka_ok meme
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
bisexuality | 105 autres critiques | Mar 3, 2024 |
Actual Rating: 3.50 / 3.75.
The first half of my review is spoiler free, but the second half (clearly labeled) contains spoilers!

So here's the thing: "The Supernatural Enhancements" is a good book. A REALLY good book, in fact. I picked this up looking for something spooky, autumnal, and fresh, and this book provided all of that! The characters are quirky and interesting; the plot grabbed (and held) my attention thoroughly; the format is super cool- the story is told through audio recording transcripts, a diary, book excerpts, and more. There's even some "X-Files" references (did you hear that? That's the sound of me falling in love with Edgar Cantero).

The thing that really made me feel not-good thoughts about "The Supernatural Enhancements" was actually two things:
One- The ENDING?? I'm still a bit confused. I'm going to detail this confusion a bit more at the end of this review in a "spoilers" paragraph, but right now I'll just say that about the last 50 pages or so really starting spiraling out of my reading grasp a bit. I understand about 75% of what happened...but...that last 25% made me go, "HUH?!?" Also, I think the ghost part of the book was a bit lost in the fray. I wanted more closure with that.

Two- The book excerpts/ciphers. Okay, actually, the excerpts/ciphers were pretty cool... in MODERATION. This book contains excerpts from other "books" (all fictional books, I believe) that are part of the main character's research. But some of the excerpts were (s0rry!) boring. With a capital "B". It was mostly the ones later in the novel, but I felt like Cantero was replacing too much actual dialouge and characters interaction with these excerpts. Then there was the cipher. Oh my gosh, was it COOL...but it was again, difficult to follow at times! When A is cracking the main cipher, I really tried to learn along with him, but I felt as if I needed to take notes to even grasp it! I think this aspect would have been better executed if Cantero had used more "laymans" terms, or used a different way to explain how to crack the code.

So overall, it was a good book, and I think I'd even read this one again. I really enjoyed the mix of supernatual, cult, and Scooby-Doo-ish themes!
I'd highly recommend this as a Halloween read, too.

SPOILERS BELOW!!!

The ending: Okay. Wait. Who exactly is Betty?? Their aunt?? How old is she? What is Betty's connection to the Juggernaut again? Is Aunt Liza ANOTHER cult leader? Wait, she's connected to the Eye, too?!? WHAT? Can someone please explain the whole Betty thing to me??
This part confused me, and I feel a bit cheated. Like there was a cipher right in front of me, but Cantero refused to give me any bit of clues to work on decoding it!
Also, the murders that happen the night of the 21st and the ensuing chaos was, well, chaotic! I had some real difficulty following what was happening.

Lastly, I think there were FAR too many names to remember! There are 20 Eye members (and their respective code names!), the neighboors, the townsfolk, the lawyer, the psychatrist, the snowplow driver, the butler, and ALL THE PEOPLE IN THE DREAMS (granted, the latter didn't actually have names, but there were SO many of them!).
I kept confusing Caleb and Curtis. I didn't remember who the butler was until someone said their name AND the word "butler". I also forgot who the lawyer was when he showed up at the end and had to flip back in the book to find his name again.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
deborahee | 42 autres critiques | Feb 23, 2024 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Aussi par
2
Membres
2,475
Popularité
#10,360
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
172
ISBN
40
Langues
6
Favoris
4

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