Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Book Review: "Hourglass" by Daniel James


 

Two best friends. One living, one dead. Together they'll protect the borders between life and death.

Clyde Williams is no stranger to death, having lost his older brother and father in service to the US Marine Corps, and more recently, his best friend Kev to a liquor store hold-up. But Kev never stayed dead, and ghosts are something Clyde certainly has no experience with. And things only get stranger and deadlier for Clyde and Kev when Rose Hadfield, agent of Hourglass, knocks at their front door. Rose has some understanding of what it’s like to commune with the dead, and offers them the choice to train their untapped abilities, or remain under Hourglass’ scrutiny in the name of public safety.
Unbeknownst to either of them, they're about to embark on a collision course with an ex-KGB officer turned necromancer, the wealthy and morally dubious Cairnwood Society, and the horrific denizens of Erebus. They're about to learn that death is only the beginning. - from Booksirens.com
This eARC was given to me through Booksirens.com and I am providing an unbiased review.
I actually came across another book in this series, and since I had not read the first, I saw it was still available to request for reading. However, once I started, I just could not continue reading it, so I admit, I did not finish the book. Though the plot of the story sounded somewhat interesting, the writing just made me feel like the author was trying too hard. We have a struggling comic book artist, with a dead best friend's ghost that "lives" with him. They can converse like normal people, and the ghost is slowly gaining some sort of telekinesis power as he is a ghost longer. There conversations are just... inane? I think that is the word I want. Then the ghost starts messing with people, like an evil streak. 
They get approached by a person from a secret organization that wants to bring them on, so they both just say yes, and go traveling with said person to the 'headquarters'. I know we need to get the story moving and giving some background as to how they get in this group, but it just felt too fake, rushed, and lacked a real feel to it.

No comments: