Brian W. Matthews
Auteur de Forever Man
5 oeuvres 129 utilisateurs 76 critiques
Œuvres de Brian W. Matthews
The Conveyance 1 exemplaire
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Critiques
Forever Man par Brian W. Matthews
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Forever Man contains a lot of the elements I love. A small town setting, strong characters, and suspense that keeps me turning pages! And the Banker’s autistic son is fascinating!
Signalé
JMPowers | 49 autres critiques | Dec 1, 2022 | What a great suspenseful tale, surprising in parts and really gripping. Shared it with friends who also like it
Signalé
dolly22 | Jul 9, 2020 | Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
I have to say that I did not read the first installment of this series. I am not sure it was a huge detriment but perhaps some of the backstory might have helped. I enjoyed this book. I liked the main character and the premise of the story of him being an atheist given a religious artifact that he couldn't open. I felt Mr. Mathews told a good story that kept me captivated until the end even though, again, I didn't know about Bart Owens and his story. I will go and read the first book now.
Signalé
Keng | 22 autres critiques | Jul 6, 2016 | Review copy
The first third of The Conveyance was about ordinary people leading mostly ordinary lives. Before you know it, Brian W. Mathews lulls the reader into a comfort zone brought on by his easy-going writing style.
Mathews has a gift for developing strong characters who interact with one another in the most genuine of ways. Therapist/patient, husband/wife, best friends Everyone of those relationships was one-hundred-percent believable. It's a good thing too, because a lot of what happens in The Conveyance requires readers to check their disbelief at the door.
A visit to Emersville and a quaint little shop called Lost Desires and it's like Brad and Toni have suddenly found themselves in The Twilight Zone. It's at this shop where they purchase a Raggedy Ann type doll which will only be a a small part of the terror that's coming.
Mixed with the terror were a number of of nice similes. Things like, "This part of Michigan was farm country, wide open and flatter than the Lions' defense." And, "I turned to face my house, a sagging, post-war rambler that was one-part charm and three-parts home maintenance nightmare." I'm a sucker for this kind of stuff.
The Conveyance was one of my most enjoyable reads in recent memory. It does stray into some strange territory, yet manages to convey a good bit of terror along the way. Plenty of twists and turns, a dollop of violence, and periods of immense sorrow.
If you like a gritty story, with great characters, and a bit of the fantastic. You can't get much better than The Conveyance. I found it to be a hoot and a half.
Highly recommended.
The Conveyance is published by JournalStone and is available in both paperback and e-book formats.
By day, Brian W. Matthews works as a financial planner, but after the sun goes down he scribes stories meant to entertain and, perhaps, terrify. When he isn't developing investment portfolios or crafting tales of monsters and madmen, he tries valiantly to knock a little white ball over the rolling green hills of a golf course without hitting traps or trees. His previous works include two short stories, both of which appeared in the anthology, Foreshadows: The Ghosts of Zero. His novels include Forever Man and its sequel, Revelation. I've read them both and can highly recommend them. Brian lives in southeast Michigan with his wife, daughter, and two step-daughters.… (plus d'informations)
The first third of The Conveyance was about ordinary people leading mostly ordinary lives. Before you know it, Brian W. Mathews lulls the reader into a comfort zone brought on by his easy-going writing style.
Mathews has a gift for developing strong characters who interact with one another in the most genuine of ways. Therapist/patient, husband/wife, best friends Everyone of those relationships was one-hundred-percent believable. It's a good thing too, because a lot of what happens in The Conveyance requires readers to check their disbelief at the door.
A visit to Emersville and a quaint little shop called Lost Desires and it's like Brad and Toni have suddenly found themselves in The Twilight Zone. It's at this shop where they purchase a Raggedy Ann type doll which will only be a a small part of the terror that's coming.
Mixed with the terror were a number of of nice similes. Things like, "This part of Michigan was farm country, wide open and flatter than the Lions' defense." And, "I turned to face my house, a sagging, post-war rambler that was one-part charm and three-parts home maintenance nightmare." I'm a sucker for this kind of stuff.
The Conveyance was one of my most enjoyable reads in recent memory. It does stray into some strange territory, yet manages to convey a good bit of terror along the way. Plenty of twists and turns, a dollop of violence, and periods of immense sorrow.
If you like a gritty story, with great characters, and a bit of the fantastic. You can't get much better than The Conveyance. I found it to be a hoot and a half.
Highly recommended.
The Conveyance is published by JournalStone and is available in both paperback and e-book formats.
By day, Brian W. Matthews works as a financial planner, but after the sun goes down he scribes stories meant to entertain and, perhaps, terrify. When he isn't developing investment portfolios or crafting tales of monsters and madmen, he tries valiantly to knock a little white ball over the rolling green hills of a golf course without hitting traps or trees. His previous works include two short stories, both of which appeared in the anthology, Foreshadows: The Ghosts of Zero. His novels include Forever Man and its sequel, Revelation. I've read them both and can highly recommend them. Brian lives in southeast Michigan with his wife, daughter, and two step-daughters.… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
FrankErrington | Jun 15, 2016 | Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 5
- Membres
- 129
- Popularité
- #156,299
- Évaluation
- ½ 3.5
- Critiques
- 76
- ISBN
- 5