Jeff Sexton
Deceptive Description Mars Otherwise Still Intriguing Tale. Straight up: The description of this book (which can change at any time, but my commentary here is accurate to the one that exists at the time I write this review) is NOT an accurate depiction of what this tale actually is - and this blatant deception is the reason for the star deduction here. The description leads the reader to think this is going to be some kind of ghost ship type story, or at least a far more mysterious adventure than it turns out to be. Instead, we get (without going *too* deep into spoiler territory)... more of a social commentary disguised as a mystery thriller.
To be clear, the story we get is actually *good*. It is a heart-pounding, balls to the wall, never want to stop reading thrillfest where just when you think you know what is happening... you realize you don't have a freaking clue. But just like with the 2010s era "Robocop" movie, don't lead me to believe I'm getting one thing and then give me something that is not only not that thing, but something very different than my expectations were when you told me I was getting that thing.
Even the writing structure is interesting here, choosing for 130+ shorter - sometimes barely a single page long, even in Kindle form - chapters, perhaps as a crutch to help "sell" the pacing. But every single chapter does end on a bit of a stinger/ cliffhanger that entices the reader to actively go into the next chapter right this second... even as smart readers quickly realize exactly the mechanism being used here.
For those who want a mysterious action thriller with a side of social commentary that will leave you breathless and desperately wanting the next chapter (or perhaps even a sequel)... this is absolutely a great escapist Summer Thriller kind of read that would play well in Summer Movie Season on the silver screen - it has that same kind of "you absolutely need to suspend all disbelief, but if you do, you will be rewarded with one *hell* of a ride" quality.
Overall, truly a great read for what it actually is - but what it actually is is *not* what the current description leads the reader to believe. Very much recommended.