Reviewed by Rowena on
I’m a sucker for character development. If you have a prayer of making me fall for your book then you’d better get me to like your main character. Hell, any character would do it for me. Unfortunately, the main character in this book just didn’t cut it for me. I’m used to reading romance novels where the writing is emotional and the events that happen either slowly unfold or happen so fast that you feel like you were slapped in the face but either way, you feel something. The entire time that I was reading this book, I couldn’t connect with the suit, Nick Mancini.
Nick is a lawyer who has seen some pretty interesting characters in his life. He’s defended people that were innocent and people who weren’t innocent. It’s his job to defend those that don’t have a defense and his latest case involves a man who is accused of molesting three little boys. The guy is a teacher’s aide with a stand up reputation and no record, at all. He’s a model citizen but things aren’t adding up to Nick. So Nick starts an investigation into the case and his gut is telling him that something isn’t right about the whole thing.
Meanwhile, there’s a rapist on the loose that people are calling Spiderman. He climbs into women’s windows and has his way with them before he leaves. The way that he climbs into these windows is he comes in through the roof, Spiderman style…but that’s a completely different case.
It took me for.ever. to read this book. The beginning was so slow that by the time I got to page 150 in the book, I put it down for good. I couldn’t get into the way that this story is told. It was very dry. Without emotion. I couldn’t connect with Nick. I couldn’t connect with the story and trying to keep on reading became a chore so I DNF’d it. Talking about it with the members of my book club that did finish the book was much more interesting than actually reading it. Finding out what happened was fun, but not enough for me to go back and finish it.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 21 October, 2013: Finished reading
- 21 October, 2013: Reviewed