Block City Craft 3D-Multiplayer free mobile pixel strike wars gun shooting games
Games and Sports
App
Compete with players all around the world in multiplayer battles in this first-person shooter....
Server for Minecraft
Reference and Utilities
App
Enter the Minecraft PE Servers! Find and Connect the best multiplayer Minecraft PE servers with Our...
Gangstar: West Coast Hustle HD
Games and Entertainment
App
Experience the most successful crime simulation on the iPad! Explore a city inspired by Los Angeles...
White Boy Rick: My Time as an Undercover Teenage Drug Informant for the FBI
Richard Wershe and Scott Burnstein
Book
Synopsis Soon to be a major motion picture with Matthew McConaughey and Jennifer Jason LeighMeet...
biography
Sky Hunting - Mini Survival Game With Block Multiplayer
Games
App
***Welcome to "Sky Hunting" *** "Sky Hunting" from JoyDo is here!Developed by the publisher of...
Riptide (Boys of Summer)
Book
He’s after the ultimate rush. Can an unexpected relationship with a girl he’s never seen stop...
Young Adult Contemporary Romance
Island of Thieves
Book
When a new security gig turns into a setup, expert thief Van Shaw finds himself the prey in a...
His Untameable Wickedness (Untameable #1)
Book
“You love to hurt, I love to hurt. A perfect f*cking match we make.” ~ Adrian LEO A...
Dark Erotica Romantic Suspense
Luke (12 KP) rated Ghostbusters (1984) in Movies
Oct 3, 2017
<i>I won a copy for free through Totally Random Books on Facebook</i>
<i>Crusher</i> is the first installment and debut novel in a young adult thriller series by Irish born author Niall Leonard. Set in present day London it follows Finn Maguire, an illiterate, 17-year old drop out with no GCSEs, after the murder of his stepfather. Being marked as the prime suspect by the police, Finn is determined to discover who the real murdered was, and just as importantly, what their motive was.
As the story unfolds Finn pursues multiples of potential killers. Could it be someone his father knew? As an ex-actor many people knew him. Or was he writing about something someone would rather no become public knowledge? Perhaps London’s biggest gangster, Joseph McGovern, had something to do with it? As Finn gets involved with these people he finds he has put him self in danger of being killed as well.
Leonard writes well and the story is fast paced and engaging however there was an inconsistency in the narrative. Towards the beginning Finn tells the reader “I put in my password and the laptop grunted and groaned… The cops hadn’t asked for my password… Obviously they’d managed to bypass it some how.” However in the following chapter Finn talks about the same laptop: “Eventually the desktop appeared with a tinny fanfare. I’d never bothered with a password… I found it a huge pain in the arse to enter one.” Hmm, that does not quite add up!
Another issue with this novel is that Finn is meant to be an uneducated, ex-drug dealer however he comes across as more of a semi-polite but witty average teenager who is able to take care of himself. The character portrayal becomes slightly more accurate towards the conclusion of the book, but some may find it difficult to picture Finn the way Leonard intended readers to.
Despite these complaints it is a good read. Many young adults would enjoy it.