A Not So Model Home by David James

A Not So Model Home

by David James

In order to get the listing for Ian Forbes, realtor Amanda Thorn must appear on a bizarre reality dating show he's filming and discovers that there is a killer among the catty cast of characters when two of his prospective lovers turn up dead.

Reviewed by MurderByDeath on

1.5 of 5 stars

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I'm not sure what to think of this book. It's formula fits the cozy bill: amateur sleuth finds herself surrounded by murder and mayhem and stumbles across clues to solve the murder. Witty dialogue and comedy abound. Light romance throughout the story. BUT, the male author seems to see it as a goal to include as much vulgarity and sexual references as possible in 229 pages. Now I'm not at all adverse to vulgarity, but it just doesn't feel like it fits here - it feels like the author is going for shock value and little else. The plot line itself does lend itself to the variety of sexually oriented conversations throughout the book, but those conversations felt exaggerated and over-the-top, and it just comes off silly - like a teenage boy has written it and wants to pack as many "shocking" words as possible into the dialogue. It's too bad, because there's a lot of great humour to be found as well.

Another oddity that screamed at me throughout this book and his first one in the series, [b:Thee Bedrooms, Two Baths, One Very Dead Corpse|7723839|Thee Bedrooms, Two Baths, One Very Dead Corpse|David James|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1348514590s/7723839.jpg|10481588]: The author has the characters constantly repeating the names of the person they're talking to. For example in one conversation with her neighbour, Regina, she says Regina's name 7 times. As in "Regina, it was one slap. One." ... "Regina, I don't know any of the people who sent these flowers."..."They were all gay. Or at least two of them were, Regina." This conversation only goes on for about a page and a half. People don't talk like that, it's weird and annoying.

The mystery in the book was cleverly done, lots of suspects, lots of opportunities and a bit of a surprise twist at the end. The story kept me guessing all the way to the end. Amanda Thorne is a likeable character and she is surrounded by a lot more likeable characters. The author just needs to decide what type of book he's trying to write and to what purpose. I'm not sorry I read the book - there is a lot to enjoy, but I'll check out the next book more closely before buying it/reading it to see if the author shows any signs of growing up.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 18 November, 2012: Finished reading
  • 18 November, 2012: Reviewed