Photo de l'auteur

J J Dupuis

Auteur de Roanoke Ridge

3 oeuvres 20 utilisateurs 6 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de J J Dupuis

Roanoke Ridge (2020) 9 exemplaires
Umboi Island (2022) 6 exemplaires
Lake Crescent (2021) 5 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Nationalité
Canada
Pays (pour la carte)
Canada

Membres

Critiques

Thanks NetGalley and Dundurn Press for this book. It was a fast read, and engaging. A cryptozoologist and her team head to Newfoundland to look for Cressie, a giant eel, so they can film a documentary. Cue the scary music. Instead, they pull up a skeleton wrapped in a tarp along with a Portuguese gold coin. What don’t the villagers want the outsiders to know?
This book is set for a Summer publication and it will be a great beach read.
 
Signalé
Sunandsand | 1 autre critique | Apr 30, 2022 |
J.J. Dupuis's Creature X mystery series involves a fun, original premise and includes a diverse, engaging cast. The central character, Laura Reagan, is a science blogger-turned-television-host for the television series Creature X. The daughter of an enthused, amateur cryptozoologist father, Reagan is committed to logic and the scientific method. The producers of the show are hoping to rope in an "alien autopsy" audience with hype and outrageous claims; Reagan is hoping to inject enough hard science to turn those viewers into critical thinks with enough understanding of science to become "un-duped" regarding creatures like Bigfoot. The first volume in this series, Roanoake Ridge, focused on Bigfoot; Lake Crescent examines Cressie, a a Newfoundland lake "monster," purportedly a 30-foot-long eel.

Somehow, as Reagan engages her pursuit of public scientific literacy, she finds herself stumbling over human mysteries, in addition to cryptozoological ones. In Lake Crescent, an underwater rover used by the Creature X film crew pulls up a human skeleton that may or may not be connected to a little-known plane crash/snowmobile accident (it's not clear which) from several decades ago.

The mystery here is solid, if not complex, presenting several possible villains. The real joy of this series, however, is its cast. Besides Reagan, we have a programming whiz; an exceptionally smart woman whose pursuit of a doctorate was derailed when she filed sexual harassment charges against her dissertation advisor; and a popinjay network representative much more committed to stirring up controversy that looking for scientific truths.

If you enjoy mystery series built around interesting premises, you'll definitely want to check out both Lake Crescent and the title that preceded it, Roanoke Ridge. They're perfect vacation reads when you're looking for a bit of offbeat entertainment.

I received a free electronic review copy of this title from the publisher via EdelweissPlus; the opinions are my own.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Sarah-Hope | 1 autre critique | Jun 18, 2021 |
Full disclosure: This was a book that my manager asked the publisher for on my behalf, despite me telling her not to.

This was a pleasantly satisfying mystery with bonus cryptid content! It’s tightly written and plotted, just as long as it needed to be, and it goes in some interesting directions. I was not expecting as much actual science fact as I got, for instance, or as much nuance when it came to Bigfoot believers. It wasn’t a perfect book (see below) but it was entertaining and I’m hooked enough to look for the sequel when it comes out.

While Dupuis is honestly great at setting, and good at sketching out secondary characters, mannerisms, voice, and all, I found Laura, our narrator/sleuth, to be kind of bland. She’s distinct enough to be her own person, but I never got a real sense of who she was, just what she was interested in or was doing at the moment, with enough backstory to explain her presence in the story. Otherwise, she was just kind of there to be the protagonist, if that makes sense?

The other thing that said “debut novel” is some plotting quirks. For the most part, I liked that this followed the usual mystery beats but never really felt like it did, and that Dupuis continues that off-beatness with the obligatory romantic subplot. (Okay, maybe especially that.) I also liked that there was a missing person and a murder and the question of Bigfoot, so that I was constantly guessing on some front. But it did also feel like some things got dropped in favour of others, most notably that Laura’s partly there to support the missing researcher’s wife but then she’s driving around town instead of keeping her company or even checking in at night.

All in all, this was a well-done mystery that, for its flaws, was just good enough to keep me going, though I’m not sure that would still be the case if “cryptids” and “cozy mystery” weren’t both so much my thing. It’s a good small-press debut, I have hopes for the sequel, and I’m actually glad my boss ignored me because I enjoyed the read.

To bear in mind: may be somewhat dodgy on the mental illness front but I’m not versed enough in the issues with the specific rep to truly weigh in
6.5/10
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
NinjaMuse | 3 autres critiques | Sep 16, 2020 |
Roanoke Ridge by J.J. Dupuis is a recommended mystery and the first book in the start of a new series.

Laura Reagan is the owner of a popular website called Science Is Awesome. Science IA strives to cover news worthy science topics with reality and facts, including cryptozoological investigations. This is in contrast to Laura's upbringing by her father who famously filmed a distant shot of a Sasquatch and child in the woods at Roanoke Ridge, Oregon. Now Laura's mentor, relative, and Bigfoot researcher Professor Berton Sorel has gone missing right as the annual Roanoke Valley Bigfoot Festival is about to start. Laura and her friend Saad Javed (who knows the difference between hard science and pseudoscience) are going to Roanoke Ridge to help search for Professor Sorel and maybe uncover the facts behind the recent Bigfoot sightings. When the search and rescue operation results in the body of a notorious Bigfoot hoaxer being found, and not the Professor's, the investigation expands.

The mystery is straightforward so don't expect heart-stopping action or a tension filled plot. The pace is slow and sometimes meandering, but the book is short so it is a quick read. While there are sentences and descriptions that shine, other parts of the narrative are pedestrian, which left me feeling that the writing in Roanoke Ridge is competent, but not exceptional. Be prepared for several long lectures included in the novel, some of which may be insulting to readers. Those lectures actually are a big impairment to the narrative. Chapters open with quotes over the years from various sources about Bigfoot or Sasquatch sightings, which add an interesting touch. The ending does feel rushed.

Admittedly any mystery involving Bigfoot would immediately draw my attention if simply for the novelty and kitsch factor. The idea of this being part of a series of creature mysteries is intriguing, but I'm uncertain if I will read another novel in the series. Laura is the only character who receives sufficient development but I'm not sure she is appealing enough to carry a whole series. The other characters are all caricatures representing different stereotypical types of people. Laura simply wasn't an interesting or appealing enough character to subject myself to wading through more thought lectures embedded in the plot, however reading another book in the series might be based more on what creature is sought.
Disclosure: My review copy was courtesy of Dundurn Press.
http://www.shetreadssoftly.com/2020/03/roanoke-ridge.html
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3252552315
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
SheTreadsSoftly | 3 autres critiques | Mar 29, 2020 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Membres
20
Popularité
#589,235
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
6
ISBN
6