231 reviews for:

Hitting the Wall

Cate C. Wells

3.78 AVERAGE

emotional tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
challenging emotional hopeful fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Wtf el final?????

blkbabs's review

3.0

Best part was Dina and Mia’s conversation.

Kellum is a dumb dumb.
tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: N/A
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
tesaelin's profile picture

tesaelin's review

4.0

MCs:
Shay & Kellum

Subpar Synopsis:
At 17, Shay is pregnant by the town's golden boy, Kellum, and finds herself run out of town by some powerful figures without him having any knowledge. Six years pass and circumstances cause her to return to Stonecut for awhile to get herself and her daughter, Mia, back on their feet. When Kellum notices them while on patrol, he instantly recognizes Shay and the resemblance Mia has realizing that his whole world is about to change. Despite having been fed from a silver spoon most of his life, Shay's situation forces him to face a lot more than just his own life choices. He's forced to face the reality that the world he thought he knew, and the people he thought he understood, are not what they seem.

Thoughts:
This was a bit of a heartbreaker but I didn't hate it. Shay's (justifiable) paranoia to everyone in the town and their intentions while trying to protect her daughter was tough to read through. You just wanted her to finally be able to let down her guard and get a break at some point. Enter Kellum, the golden boy blinded by his family's fortune and privilege. I think Kellum's character was interesting and wholesome but the flaws were relatable. A lot of us want to think that resolution is possible; that people can reform or that we've just simply just misunderstood. My only complaint is that the point of recognition to the events was very rushed and we saw little to no resolution. That may be due to the fact that Cash's story perhaps picks up from there but I would have liked to have seen them finally have more solid ground before moving onto the next chapter.

Overall: 3.9/5
serpentskirtt's profile picture

serpentskirtt's review

4.0

Edit: I reviewed the wrong book. SIGH. This is NOT a motorcycle club romance, though it overlaps with one. UGGGG

This was my first Cate C. Wells book and I am LIKING her stuff. This was a sweet story about a sweet, innocent-of-his-family's-doings deputy. Once he learns of his kid, he is all in the business of doing the right thing. I really like the economic-disadvantage-narrative pervading this series, and I always enjoy reading characters on the spectrum.

Kellum and everybody else in the town really just stuck their heads in the sand huh

I think there should have been more groveling 

I can totally understand Shay’s concerns and why she couldn’t really trust Kellum
quorrathelastiso's profile picture

quorrathelastiso's review

3.0

This book gets a lot of hype. I'm a big fan of the Steel Bones MC series by [a:Cate C. Wells|19392438|Cate C. Wells|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1688385018p2/19392438.jpg], and the Stonecut series includes characters that also appear or are featured in Steel Bones. I found this story and it's followup, [b:Against a Wall|59725768|Against a Wall (Stonecut County, #2)|Cate C. Wells|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1638226255l/59725768._SY75_.jpg|94055128], incredibly frustrating - which is part of the point; they feature a rich, upper-crust family that's omnipresent in a small town and as someone who grew up in a rural small town that contained a few families in this "ruling class," where everyone knows and will do everything for you, talk to you differently, and make your life easier - I did not like the Wall family at all. And again, that's kindof the point. Something that Cate C. Wells does incredibly well is writing poverty and people who are disadvantaged or disenfranchised in some way, whether it's income, stigma from past actions, illness, or some other factor. Sometimes it's downright disturbing or brutal. But it's good - or if it's not "good," it's certainly effective. And it hits different people differently - some of the stories I've liked best are really hard for others to read. Personally, I found dealing with MMC Kellum Wall, who grew up in the privilege and insulation of his rich family, exhausting.

MMC Kellum grew up with a lot of privilege; now he's a hero sheriff's deputy well known and loved in his town; unfortunately, he knocked up a teenage girl (our FMC Shay); in the beginning we see what happens when she's pregnant and his family and boss show up and throw her a paltry sum of money to leave town and never tell Kellum that the baby it his, as it'll "ruin his reputation" and he'll "lose everything." (Whatever. It won't. They're just trashy rich jerks.) Shay eventually ends up in poverty and with no option she can think of to escape than moving back to Stonecut County. She eventually reconnects with Kellum, who she's (understandably) INCREDIBLY wary of, and who had no idea that any of the above happened or that her child is his. When he finds out, he absolutely cannot fathom why no one told him and cannot reconcile his fluffy, good-boy world view with the fact that a lot of the people around him are not good people. Like he legitimately refuses to believe it. And Cate C. Wells shows Shay grappling with that and even getting after Kellum for it. While I was REALLY hoping that by the end of the story
Spoilerhe would have reconciled that some of the people in his life were really horrible, he never really seemed to get there, which was incredibly frustrating. It's really admirable that he stepped up and didn't act like a complete tool I guess, but that seems like the bare minimum; if I were Shay, I'd still want nothing to do with his family. I wanted more comeuppance than what we get.
What we got is probably more realistic, though I will say it wasn't as satisfying; personally, I just don't have patience for people like the Wall family and in my opinion if Kellum
Spoilernever admits how messed up his family is, then he's never done Shay completely right.
That could just be my own baggage talking.

All in all, 3 stars - definitely glad I read it, but it was a tough one for me. I'd give it 3.5 if I could. I prefer the world of Steel Bones than the world of Stonecut County, and I guess if characters are going to be morally gray, I'd rather they be honest about it like the bikers in Steel Bones are as opposed to members of an "upstanding" small town family that runs everyone not useful to them into the ground.