Reviewed by pamela on
I felt that the plot and writing in Day Four was much stronger than it had been in The Three. This could in part be due to the fact that Lotz focuses on writing flowing prose, rather than the found documents approach she took in the last book. As such the characters were believable, they were likeable in their own way, and the reader gets a real sense of dread with what is happening. It left just enough to the imagination to retain suspense all the way through, and is so descriptive that I got a real sense of the sights, sounds, smells and the general claustrophobic feel of the characters' experiences.
While I felt that Lotz' documentary style in the first book could have been stronger, I did however miss it in this book. She is obviously a strong writer, and I think keeping the style going over the series would have been a bonus. It was not the style that was difficult in The Three, I just didn't think the writing was as strong. With the strength of the prose that comes across in Day Four I think it would have been served well with the same documentary style. As a consequence Day Four felt like a completely different book and not at all part of the same series as The Three. Not until the very end did Lotz take on that same found documents approach, and it was absolutely fantastic! In the last few pages it really lived up to the originality of The Three.
As a sequel this novel didn't do a lot, but standing alone I thought it was a great read. I'll definitely be looking forward to whatever the next novel in the series will be. I certainly hope there is one, and I hope it ties together the overarching story a bit more.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 10 May, 2015: Finished reading
- 10 May, 2015: Reviewed