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Book Summary InformationAuthor: Linwood Barclay Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2010-03-09 ISBN: 055380717X Number of pages: 432 Publisher: Delacorte Press Product features:
Book Reviews of Never Look Away: A ThrillerBook Review: Dont Look At All Summary: 1 Stars
One of the joys of reading is seeing an author mature with each new book that they release. A new book should be a strong attempt to be better than the last, or atleast as good as their other works. The unfortunate reality is that Barclay has gotten worse with each new book with this one seeming as if he didnt even try at all. I didnt think he could drop the bomb again like he did with "Fear the Worst", but this was hands down Barclays worst book to date.
It had a good simple premise: A mans wife goes missing one day and he tries to find out what exactly happened on that day. It doesnt start off as well as his other books, and just coasts along without even getting better. In fact, the story starts to get worse and more pendantic with each new page of dialouge or descriptions. Reading this book was like checking off the cliches of Barclays usual standards, only in a far less quality format.
Is there an ok story that starts off well but eventually jumps into the absurd? Check
As I said before, it starts off fairly well with its prolouge, but after that, it immediately jumps backwards in time for 70 pages before the story finally starts up again. Even then, it still takes forever for anything to truely happen and once your getting past page 100, thats when it becomes inexcuseable. Having a constant switch of point-of-view didnt help the story much either. While it wasnt hard to understand who was talking and where they were, it took even more life out of this lifeless story. We can learn one shocking vauge detail from the main character, and then jump to the head detectives point-of-view for a few chapters before finally finding out what happened, all of which was some minor detail in order to drive the boring plot forward. You can read the first and last pages of each chapter and miss absolutely nothing which also doesnt help at all either. The ending, as with all of Barclays books, is still nothing short of terrible and being, well, short. While surprisingly not as bad as his other books, its become painfully obvious that Barclays cannot write a good or even remotely decent ending.
Does the book feature bad and unlikable cahracters, especially the women? Check
Theres not much else to really say about the characters in this book. Aside from maybe two people, every character is someone you cannot care about at all or even like to begin with, the main character included. The entire "Part 1" of the book only serves to tell us this. Its like it grabs the reader by the shoulder, pulls them off to the side and says "You these characters here? Not a single one will be likeable and will be left either ignored and undeveloped or will play the role of the equivelant of a high school bully." Almost every character is there for a reason and gives off a bad dues ex machina feeling as well. The entire purpose of one character is to say very little at the start, only to be never heard of or seen from again until late in the book when their dead body is found in order to move the plot. Theres also a couple who comes out of nowhere that bring "shocking" news to the main character, only to also be ignored until the plot demands that they need to be around to tell more "shocking" secrets that only they know. Even the main characters son serves no purpose other than to be annoying dead weight up until the end part of the book, again, solely to drive the plot forward. There isnt a single character that you could describe as being a decent person, because everyone acts as a jerk the entire time. I didnt think that anything could have a worse cast than the show Glee does, but the people in this book are a strong rival for that title.
Does the ending just suck? Check
As I said before, the ending flat out sucks. However, I somewhat glossed over it because i didnt go into detail as to how bad it really was. Without trying to spoil anything, the main bad guy might as well have come out of hammer-space because we never see or hear about him until the very last chapter. He has no backstory at all, hes just there for the sake of evil. There are a few chapters for when its in his point-of-view, but they add nothing to the story and each one is brief. The subplot was basically ignored the entire time up until the end and was still ingored and left somewhat unfinished. We learned everything we needed to know about it at the beginning, and the ending just retold us what we already knew. Not to mention that it had nothing at all to do with the central plot in the first place, basically making it pointless space in this book. Theres also a small heist thrown in at the end that serves no point either and isnt mentioned until the final few chapters and is only there to be more pointless filler as well.
I know that Barclay can do better, Ive read both "No Time for Goodbye" and "Too Close to Home", both of which were good books. This book was just nothing short of being terrible which is disappointing. Fear The Worst wasnt that great of a book either, and it now seems as if Barclay is just riding on his reputation. This really was a poor excuse of a book and I regret having to hound the people at the book store down for it since no copies were sitting up front. Skip this book, but try Barclays earlier books, because this is a joke compared to them.
Summary of Never Look Away: A Thriller"Where has Linwood Barclay been all my life? His is the best thriller I've read in five years. Once I was 30 pages in, I literally couldn't put it down. The writing is crisp; the twists are jolting and completely unexpected. Think 'Rebecca' and you'll be in the right neighborhood." - Stephen King
In this tense, mesmerizing thriller by Linwood Barclay, critically acclaimed author of Fear the Worst and Too Close to Home, a man?s life unravels around him when the unthinkable strikes. A warm summer Saturday. An amusement park. David Harwood is glad to be spending some quality time with his wife, Jan, and their four-year-old son. But what begins as a pleasant family outing turns into a nightmare after an inexplicable disappearance. A frantic search only leads to an even more shocking and harrowing turn of events. Until this terrifying moment, David Harwood is just a small-town reporter in need of a break. His paper, the Promise Falls Standard, is struggling to survive. Then he gets a lead that just might be the answer to his prayers: a potential scandal involving a controversial development project for the outskirts of this picturesque upstate New York town. It?s a hot-button issue that will surely sell papers and help reverse the Standard?s fortunes, but strangely, David?s editors keep shooting it down.
Why? That?s a question no longer at the top of David?s list. Now the only thing he cares about is restoring his family. Desperate for any clue, David dives into his own investigation?and into a web of lies and deceit. For with every new piece of evidence he uncovers, David finds more questions?and moves ever closer to a shattering truth. Amazon Best Books of the Month, March 2010 With a storyline that's wound tighter than a rattlesnake's coil, author Linwood Barclay returns to play upon our deepest fears with Never Look Away. Journalist David Harwood is left only with questions after a family outing becomes a terrifying nightmare in the mere blink of an eye. Someone, it would seem, is out to get him, and when suspicious evidence labels him a ?person of interest? in a mysterious disappearance, the unassuming Harwood is forced to bare his teeth in pursuit of the truth. Fans of Fear the Worst, Too Close to Home, and No Time for Goodbye should already know the drill: Barclay refuses to grant readers any respite with gut-wrenching plot twists that keep firing until the final page. But those unfamiliar with his work would be wise to clear their calendars for this engaging non-stop thriller. --Dave Callanan
Amazon Exclusive: Linwood Barclay on Never Look Away Years ago, when I worked on the city desk for The Toronto Star, every once in a while someone would phone in with a hot tip. Something they?d heard from a friend of a friend. The story was that children were being spirited away from a local theme park. Grabbed, disguised, thrown into a van and driven away so fast their parents hadn?t even noticed they were gone yet. And the kicker was, the story was being suppressed because the theme park owners didn?t want bad publicity. There was never, ever anything to it. I?d worked in the news business long enough to know that when a kid goes missing. That story gets out. Big time. Our theme park was not the only one where this urban myth played out. I?d heard the same story about a number of big attractions. But never with any real names attached. It always happened to the boyfriend of someone?s cousin?s brother?s boss. But the story stayed with me just the same. I started playing around with it in my head. I thought, okay, let?s start with the myth, but then let?s do something entirely different. Someone?s going to disappear, all right, but not the person you?re expecting... As I began working out the storyline for my new thriller, Never Look Away, the amusement park scene became a way in to a very different kind of tale for me. One about secrets, about past, hidden lives, about how sometimes the people we?re closest to are the ones we know the least. One significant way in which it differs from my previous novels is that it is not told entirely in first person. This time, there were things I had to keep from my protagonist that the reader just had to know. That time on the city desk was part of more than 30 years I spent working in newspapers. It was a period in which papers mattered a great deal. They still do, but it?s hardly news to point out they?re facing tough times, a perfect storm of changing technology meeting harsh economic realities. So when it came to deciding what that protagonist would do for a living, I decided to make him a reporter at a small daily that?s more concerned with maintaining revenues than breaking scandals, especially if breaking them will hurt the bottom line. (I like to point out, I never encountered anything like that at The Star.) I was well into writing this novel when Michael Connelly?s terrific novel The Scarecrow came out, which is also set against the backdrop of a newspaper in decline. I suspect these will not be the only two novels to explore--either in depth or in a tangential way--the significant changes this institution is going through. Another urban myth that used to get called into the paper now and again was that some unscrupulous developer was building houses so cheaply, someone?s piano went right through the living room floor. We never found that house, but there might still be a murder mystery in that story, especially if there was some poor bastard in that basement. --Linwood Barclay
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