The White Room
Book
"What we do behind closed doors reveals the naked truth of who we really are." Welcome to the...
Adult Contemporary Romance
The Dark Path
Book
Merry, Sam and Connor are the perfect family in the perfect place. In their ideal lake house in the...
The Universe Next Door: A Journey Through 57 Alternative Realities, Parallel Worlds and Possible Futures
Book
You are here. But what if you weren't? You could easily have ended up in a different reality...
Door Frame Pull-Up Bar Workouts: Full Body Strength Training for Arms, Chest, Shoulders, Back, Core, Glutes and Legs
Book
A COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE TO GETTING RIPPED WITH THE POPULAR AT-HOME PULL-UP BAR Follow the programs in...
Ross (3284 KP) rated Doors: Twilight in Books
Mar 24, 2021
The first quarter of these books is identical, with the damsel in distress being introduced and the team coming together and being given their tasks. At this stage, there is next to no organisation around their approach, it really is simply a bunch of people heading into the unknown and being drastically under-prepared. When the team quickly find the missing and take her back to the surface, the reader is left somewhat taken aback at the speed with which it was resolved. This is nothing compared to how the reader feels when the team go back looking for the real missing woman, simply based on their employer's assistant's momentary mistake that the woman's eyes were the wrong colour. This is not challenged by anyone in the team, who head back downstairs. It's a bigger WTF moment than the Batman vs Superman 'Martha' fiasco.
As with some of Heitz's Dwarves books, I think this suffered from fairly poor translation, as a number of phrases and words just are not clear. At no point did i really know where the team were heading, forwards or backwards, which door they went through etc.
And the promise of heading into the future was very much an empty one. Some members of the team briefly find themselves in near-future Frankfurt and there is a short section of the book which adds no value and has no connection to the rest of the book whatsoever. Thereafter, there is just some cliched mysterious dark maze adventures, with some unexplained conspiracy around the use and beginnings of the doors and their purpose. (I am currently around 80% of the way through the 'Colony' book, having mercifully skipped the first, repeated, quarter, and am starting to realise that there is likely to be an overall story arch that only becomes clear once the reader has read all three books).
This book, and the series as a whole, offered so much potential and teased so much, but this one at least completely failed to deliver for me.
Advance copy received from NetGalley and the publishers in exchange for an honest review.
Dianne Robbins (1738 KP) created a post
Apr 8, 2019 (Updated Apr 8, 2019)
No One Here Gets Out Alive: The Biography of Jim Morrison
Jerry Hopkins and Danny Sugerman
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Here is Jim Morrison in all his complexity-singer, philosopher, poet, delinquent-the brilliant,...
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WORLDS KEPT THEM APART. DESTINY BROUGHT THEM TOGETHER. Aria has lived her whole life in the...