I'm starting to seriously think it is. Lawrence Talbot didn't have fate so clearly turned against him in the Wolfman remake and that poor guy had virtually every bad thing happen from childhood to his adult years! >_<
"I refuse to believe anything other than the notion that Patch is secretly controlling all of these people."
To some degree...erm, he is. I think Vee is just a horrible friend, though. She reminds me of the friend of Liam Neeson's daughter in that movie "Taken", the one who thought that it would be a grand idea to tell a strange guy where they were staying, alone, because "He's hot! What else is there to know?"
And trust me, it gets even dumber by way of people assuming Patch and Nora are together.
"And the fact that you've entrapped this poor girl by removing all options for help, thereby rendering her completely helpless, makes me think that this book would be more suited for the horror genre, a tale in the style of 'The Twilight Zone.'"
I'm actually reminded of the review of this on the Sparkle Project, which commented that the book would be a lot more interesting if it turned out that Nora was just going insane.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-06-24 10:22 pm (UTC)I'm starting to seriously think it is. Lawrence Talbot didn't have fate so clearly turned against him in the Wolfman remake and that poor guy had virtually every bad thing happen from childhood to his adult years! >_<
"I refuse to believe anything other than the notion that Patch is secretly controlling all of these people."
To some degree...erm, he is. I think Vee is just a horrible friend, though. She reminds me of the friend of Liam Neeson's daughter in that movie "Taken", the one who thought that it would be a grand idea to tell a strange guy where they were staying, alone, because "He's hot! What else is there to know?"
And trust me, it gets even dumber by way of people assuming Patch and Nora are together.
"And the fact that you've entrapped this poor girl by removing all options for help, thereby rendering her completely helpless, makes me think that this book would be more suited for the horror genre, a tale in the style of 'The Twilight Zone.'"
I'm actually reminded of the review of this on the Sparkle Project, which commented that the book would be a lot more interesting if it turned out that Nora was just going insane.