Cover Image: An Intimate Deception

An Intimate Deception

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

I quite enjoyed this book but think it would have benefited by being tighter and shorter.there were too many periods where nothing much happened I didn't take to the central character or her little brother, and felt too much focus was on them.I still hadn't warmed to the brother by the end of the book, I did think things picked up towards the end of the book and there were some unexpected twists but overall this is not a book I could honestly recommend.Thanks to the publishers and netgalley for an ARC.

Was this review helpful?

This has been one of the most difficult books to plod through. Everything about it is banal and boring, including and especially MC Elle Ashley. The other MC Robin Oakes is more engaging and interesting but there is hardly anything of her in the book. The best things in the book are the cover and the title.

It is set in a really, really small town (of probably 900 people). Elle is the sheriff and also the police department, which is okay because no crime really happens there. Until there is a murder. The victim is Jessie, Elle’s old boyfriend. The murder is discovered in the presence of visiting journalist Robin.

Most of the book is spent on – really, we cannot even remember what is the focus of the book. Some parts solving the murder; some parts the busyness of small town; some part being in the head of Elle’s brother EJ (quite a repulsive character); and most part nothing. At around 80% the book picks up a tad, but it is too little too late. By the time the murderer is unearthed (don’t want to give away spoilers here), we were actually rooting for the murderer to get away and live happily ever after.

Feels terrible to say this because the author has spent around a decade with this book – but so not recommended. In fact, avoidable.

Was this review helpful?

I really wanted to finish this book but alas, it could not keep my attention. The mystery to solve the murder of Sheriff Elle’s exboyfriend is given to us in confusing chunks of past and present that I had difficulty following at times and wondering what each scene had significance to, if any. I made it 55% into the book and there was no real direction the story was taking other than life passing by in the small county after the murder. Elle was an interesting and lovably flawed character but Robin, the reporter, came off sleazy and disrespectful. There was interest between them but nothing had sparked at midpoint of the story other than a few modest conversations. I enjoy a slow burn romance but the snail pace lost my interest. The characters overall held my interest, just the story itself did not.

Was this review helpful?