Before I can go any further with this review, I must thank
Midas PR for allowing me the credits to review the lovely audiobooks from
Audible.co.uk over the past few months. I feel like I haven't thanked them and
I have got a few more audiobooks to go before I am free of audiobooks that are
either on my iPhone or in my Audible library so thanks again.
Anyway, now all that's out of the way, let's get into the
review of Midnight Crossroad (or, as I always called it, Midnight Crossing. No idea why, though...).
In Texas, there is a small town called Midnight. A town
that, on the surface, looks like any other small town. But if you stay a while,
you noticed that something doesn't feel right. No one asks questions - well,
the right questions. Then two things
happen to Midnight in very short space of time. A new resident moves into town
and the body of a young woman who went missing three months prior is discovered
on the town's first (and last) annual picnic...
And it looked like this woman had her own secrets to hide.
But in a town where not asking the right questions is the norm, will the right
questions be asked and will her killer come to light?
Before I go further, I do want to say this is a new series -
a trilogy, I believe - and it's an odd trilogy at that. There are
elements/characters/themes that come from Charlaine Harris's other series. So,
we have vampires, witches, physics, etc that come from other series such as the
Sookie Stackhouse and Harper Connelly (I believe from other people's reviews
that Midnight does touch or hint at the Lily Bard and Aurora Teagarden series
as well, but don't confirm me on that). So, if you have read any of her other series,
you will see little Easter Eggs.
Ok, my reactions to the audiobook. I oddly liked it. I
didn't love it, but once I found my footing with the story, I did enjoy
listening to it. I like that this story was about the town of Midnight and its
residents, rather than focusing on a group of people who live in this one town
(if that makes any sense). For some odd reason, it reminded me of two things: Welcome To Night Vale and The Night Circus - and I'm not 100%
certain why it did. I think both focus of a place
rather than the people of that place.
Again, am not sure if that makes sense but, in my head, it does.
And with the reader - Susan Bennett - once I got use to her voice, I fell
into the story. She never felt annoying to me, and she fitted the style of the
story with her Southern American accent (perfect for a book set in Texas).
However, I have two problems. One is linked the audiobook
and the other is linked to the story.
My audiobook problem is that there was never any gapping
between the end of a chapter and the start of the next chapter. Usually in
audiobooks, there is a gap between them (abound 3 or 4 seconds). This is
because most people would end their reading at the end of a chapter so,
naturally, you would do the same with an audiobook. And yet, not here. It was
as if the reader would read it in one breath (she wasn't), and yet there would
be a pause after the chapter title and the start of the chapter. Why do leave a
gap - a breather, if you will - at the start of a chapter but not the end?
My story issue is the killer. While it came as a shock of
who it was, it was a "Wait, what?" moment as there was no clue to
hint to that person. There was nothing, really. And that didn't satisfy me as
someone who, every now and then, does read crime books and watch crime shows
and usually gets who the killer is either very early on or just before the
detectives get it. But this had nothing. And because of this, you wonder
"Well, if I couldn't figure it out and the Police couldn't, how on EARTH
did our main characters figure it out?!"
While it might not be the best Charlaine Harris novel out
there, it's nice to read something new from here. I think I might try the next
Midnight book when it comes out... maybe... But I won't be rushing to the shops
to get it on its release date...
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