Terre a Terre: The Vegetarian Cookbook
Amanda Powley and Philip M. Taylor
Book
This is the book that vegetarians have been waiting and pleading for since Terre a Terre first...
The Regulars
Book
A fierce and feisty debut with a magical twist about three ordinary, regular girls who suddenly have...
New World Order (War of the Fae, #4)
Book
NEW YORK TIMES and USA TODAY BESTSELLING AUTHOR, ELLE CASEY, brings readers Book 4 in the YA Urban...
The Pilgrims (Pendulum #1)
Book
Eric Albright is leading a normal life until a small red door appears under a train bridge near his...
Before I Let You In
Book
If you love B A Paris’ BEHIND CLOSED DOORS and Linda Green’s WHILE MY EYES WERE CLOSED, you will...
The Haunted
Book
Clean slate. That's what Hendricks Becker- O'Malley's parents said when they moved their family to...
Death Awakening (Society #7)
Book
They call it Moon-Night. The night when the moon rises high in the sky, fully visible for all to...
No One Saw a Thing
Book
No one saw it happen. You stand on a crowded tube platform in London. Your two little girls jump on...
Ross (3284 KP) rated Doors: Colony in Books
Mar 26, 2021
The group find themselves slimmed down very quickly as members of the group drop like flies. Soon a small number of them find themselves in the company of some Russian spies, looking to stop the Americans' attempts to take power. For some reason, phony clairvoyant Coco Fendi now has actual powers and is capable of mind-reading, earning the respect and assistance of these spies.
There then follows a fairly enjoyable attempt to catch up with a train and board it to stop a nuclear war from breaking out.
The translation again is quite poor here, as some phrases do not make sense and make the reader work to understand what is meant. I am giving Heitz the benefit of the doubt and laying blame at the door of the translator here (though looking at some of the reviews on goodreads in German I'm not sure this is fair). However, there are some very odd passages that take the reader right out of the book, for example 'the time had come to test the 4x4's four-litre twin turbo engine promising 650 horsepower and a top speed of 190 miles an hour'. I mean, what the hell? Has Clarkson been asked to translate this book? It was completely irrelevant and odd.
In the 'Twilight' book of the series, there were some hints at other users of the doors and their purpose and provenance. This book builds on that to an extent, which is a clever idea from Heitz - in order to answer the questions, I think you need to read all three books. However, as a book in its own right, there are simply too many unanswered questions left (though slightly fewer than in 'Twilight').
An improvement, with a more coherent story once through the door in question, but still not a great read. As the first c25% is duplicated between books, I merrily skipped through this section looking for the distinct part starting off.
I received a free advance copy from the publisher and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.