Blur by Steven James | Book Review

18810282

BLUR BY STEVEN JAMES
Genre: YA, Mystery, Supernatural
Format: Audiobook
“Even if you know you’re sleeping, you’re still at the mercy of your dreams. People who are asleep can’t simply decide to wake up. Nightmares don’t let you off that easily. They hold you in their clutches until they decided, in their own good time, to let you go.”
― Steven James, Blur
Series: Blur Trilogy
Synopsis:
The isolated town of Beldon, Wisconsin, is shocked when a high school freshman’s body is found in Lake Algonquin. Just like everyone in the community, sixteen-year-old Daniel Byers believes that Emily Jackson’s death was accidental. But at her funeral, when he has a terrifying vision of her, his world begins to rip apart at the seams.
Convinced that Emily’s appearance was more than just a mere hallucination, Daniel begins to look carefully into her death, even as he increasingly loses the ability to distinguish fantasy from reality.
What’s real? What’s not? Where does reality end and madness begin?
As Daniel struggles to find the truth, his world begins to crumble around him as he slips further and further into his own private blurred reality.
Full of mind-bending twists and turns, Blur launches a new trilogy of young adult thrillers from Steven James, a master of suspense.

GoodreadsAmazon

review

This is a YA Mystery novel that before picking it up on a whim, I had heard nothing about it and had no idea what it was about. I have to say I was quite surprised. Although it was not the best book I have ever read (listened to), it was an interesting twist to a normal whodunnit, was fast paced and a gripping read.

Being the first time reading anything by Steven James, I have to say I found his writing to be easy to get into and thought he did suspense/mystery well! The story unravels slowly enough that you are never given too much information and left wondering what is happening and trying to piece together the mystery of what happened to Emily Jackson alongside Daniel. I will admit that James held out well on the clues and I wasn’t even close to figuring out what happened or who was involved. I also found the supernatural elements to be quite intriguing and really added to the mystery and even messed with your mind a little while trying to figure out the case of whodunnit. I loved the poetry and writing that Daniel did throughout the story. It was very deep and really worked well with the story and what was going on with Daniel.

I found the characters to be very likable and a refreshing twist on a main character. It was interesting that the popular, star athlete was the one who got involved with solving the incident of a ignored freshman girl and the fact that he was also having some schizo tendencies was a twist on the stereotypical character type. While struggling internal with the veil of reality, Daniel still worried about others and was a strong character. The secondary characters were also interesting and there was a moment that I really fell in love with Mia and thought she proved to be a badass even though she is a very secondary character not mentioned much.  Other than that there is not much character develop on any of the characters besides Daniel and I wasn’t happy with the ending for the fact that you aren’t really told why it was being done.

Overall I thought this was an intriguing, fast paced suspense whodunnit with supernatural elements. James’s writing really pulls you in and he has a way with words and descriptions that added to the overall feel of the story. It did drag at times and just didn’t complete knock me off my feet, but if you like an easy to read edge of your seat novel this is a good choice for you.

RATING-2

The Grumpy Guide to Life: Observations from Grumpy Cat by Grumpy Cat | Book Review

THE GRUMPY GUIDE TO LIFE: OBSERVATIONS FROM GRUMPY CAT BY GRUMPY CAT Genre: Non-fiction, Animal, Humor “When writing your own life story, be the villain.” Synopsis: In a world filled with inspirational know-it-alls and quotable blowhards, only one figure is indifferent enough to tell the cranky truth: Grumpy Cat. Following the success of her New York Times bestselling […]

Continue Reading

Messenger by Lois Lowry | Book Review

MESSENGER BY LOIS LOWRY Genre: YA, Dystopian “Things seem more when you’re little. They seem bigger, and distances seem farther.” ― Lois Lowry, Messenger Series: The Giver Quartet The Giver Gathering Blue Synopsis: Messenger is the masterful third novel in the Giver Quartet, which began with the dystopian bestseller The Giver, now a major motion picture. Matty has […]

Continue Reading

Losing It by Cora Carmack |Book Review

LOSING IT BY CORA CARMACK Genre: New Adult, Contemporary/Romance “Sometimes, it’s the scary things in life that are the most worthwhile.” ― Cora Carmack, Losing It Series: Losing It Synopsis:  Sick of being the only virgin among her friends, Bliss Edwards decides the best way to deal with the problem is to lose it as quickly and simply […]

Continue Reading

The Eighth Guardian by Meredith McCardle | Book Review

THE EIGHTH GUARDIAN BY MEREDITH McCARDLE Genre: YA, Sci-fi (Time Travel) Format: Audiobook “Enhancement, Not Alteration.” ― Meredith McCardle, The Eighth Guardian Synopsis:  Amanda Obermann. Code name Iris. It’s Testing Day. The day that comes without warning, the day when all juniors and seniors at The Peel Academy undergo a series of intense physical and psychological tests to […]

Continue Reading

City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett| Book Review

CITY OF STAIRS BY ROBERT JACKSON BENNETT Genre: Adult, High Fantasy, Mystery Source: Blogging For Book (In return for honest review) “Forgetting… is a beautiful thing. When you forget, you remake yourself… For a caterpillar to become a butterfly, it must forget it was a caterpillar at all. Then it will be as if the caterpillar never was […]

Continue Reading

I Want It That Way by Ann Aguirre | Book Review

I WANT IT THAT WAY BY ANN AGUIRREGenre: New Adult- Contemporary RomanceSource: The author/publisher in return for an honest review.“Not all love stories end happily. Sometimes they just end.”― Ann Aguirre, I Want It That WaySeries: 2B TrilogySynopsis:Nadia Conrad has big dreams, and she’s determined to make them come true—for her parents’ sake as well as her own. […]

Continue Reading

The Fault In Our Stars | Movie Edition

So I actually didn’t think I would ever watch this movie. I was not the hugest fan of the book and I do not think that it was a unique enough story that being a movie it wouldn’t stand out or be much different than other movies out there about cancer. TFIOS was truthful, raw and layered with […]

Continue Reading