Reviews

Deadly Messengers by Susan May

petitecourtney's review against another edition

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4.0

This book will draw you in from the very beginning. Susan May recognizes that mass shootings hardly shock the US public anymore, and masterfully adds a twist to create an effect. The shooters points of view are marvelous, excellent writing and enthralling. Unfortunately, I can't say the same for the rest of the book. While overall the writing is wonderful, it does occasionally fall flat.

The story itself centers around Kendall Jennings, a free lance writer, who herself is a victim of trauma. She is not eager to get pulled into the most recent tragedies in her city, but soon founds herself in deeper then she imagines. As massacres keep occurring, Kendall finds herself tangled up with Detective O'Grady and his partner Trip. The detectives and the writer clash in a variety of ways, but soon find themselves working together.

I didn't care much for any of the characters, Kendall is well written and she is a fairly dynamic character, but not a super interesting one at that. The romance between the characters was underdeveloped and I find myself wishing it just hadn't been included at all. I also didn't super buy into some of the plot, especially with the detectives.

Overall, I did enjoy reading this story, I felt it lagged towards the end- and got pretty bored. But the majority of the book was fantastic. I would recommend this book, though I doubt it'll remain with me for weeks to come, it still got me thinking for a couple of nights. It's a great, quick read.

jbarr5's review against another edition

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5.0

Deadly Messenger by Susan May
Don't usually read/listen to psycho thrillers but as the author gave me an audio version of this I thought I'd give it a try.
Toby Vincent should be home in bed with his girl. He was walking down a dark alley and was compelled to open the door...
The commands come from his body...he had to swing the axe. It would send a message, action is louder than words.
Kendal didn't spend a lot of time on her outside appearance. She has headaches...
She is 36 and is a freelance writer. She finds a news article about a murder who went into the local cafe and killed a few employees and a few patrons, with an axe.
Lance O'Grady was a detective on the case of the murders.
Kendal is able to interview eye witnesses and can't believe the man the cops had shot holding the axe had morphed into a different creature.
Benito works at the nursing home and he has commands to follow....
Kate had the answer to her problems, she had children to please the others....she goes on a rampage at the family outing...
Liked how the freelancer is the one to come with proof of how all the events are related to one another. Interesting things to learn about.
What I like about the book is the different angles of what happened and how they gather the clues from others and how their past plays a part in all this.
What I dislike is the gory details. I'm a romance reader and blogger.
I received this book from the author in exchange for my honest review.

cauldronblade209's review against another edition

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4.0

After receiving a free copy for my Amazon kindle through my Prime I decided what could it hurt. Started a little predictable then became interesting as the storyline progressed. Met with not one but two plot twists. With the ending leaves you wanting to know more about what occurred in the time skip.

sjj169's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5 stars

Kendall Jennings writes freelance stories to pay the bills. She does the fluff type pieces like the ones that tell you how to get Angelina Jolie lips in just five days. (I need this info)

A near by mass murder entangles her in it's web and she ends up getting the exclusive story from one of the survivors. She isn't thrilled with writing about the murders because violence turns her stomach. She keeps going though because it's helping her career and paying those never ending bills.


Then another mass murder occurs, this time at a nursing home. The killer is a different person as the first massacre ended in the death of that killer. Now it's happening again.
Kendall meets up with the detectives that are investigating the crimes, Lance O'Grady and his partner Trip.
O'Grady hates journalist due to some stuff that has happened in his past. So he is not thrilled that Kendall keeps poking her nose around.

Then a mother goes nuts and kills members of her family with no sign of any problems leading up to the massacre.


O'Grady knows that these murders cannot be coincidence. Not when they are all taking place in the same small area.
The last question, truly the most frightening when, after all these years, O'Grady thought he'd seen everything evil. Was this the new evil?

Is it all tied into a similar mass murder scene at a fast food restaurant that Kendall starts digging into?


Or can a grieving father's research into the anti-depressant SSRI's that so many of us take be leading people to commit these horrible crimes?


Or is it something worse?

I really enjoyed this different take on a serial thriller. May does a good job with keeping the story interesting and her writing is pretty good. I didn't care for the sorta romancy way that Kendall and O'Grady were acting at times but I'm a hateful old heifer.
May even makes fun of it herself in describing her thoughts as Kendall thinking about a Nicholas Sparks novel.

Not bad at all though.

Booksource: This book was author gifted to me. Susan May actually took the time to read my profile and saw that I had shelved this book on my "to-read" shelf. She sent me a very nice message asking if I was interested in reading it.
Yes, please to authors that act this way.
This did not in any way influence my review. Because like I said I'm a hateful old heifer and I review the way I want.

mad_about_books's review against another edition

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5.0

I read to be entertained, and I read to be informed. Whether reading a piece of fiction or non-fiction, I actually want a bit of both. When I am engaged and turning pages and the urge to fact check a concept interrupts me, that's a good read. While reading DEADLY MESSENGERS, that is exactly what happened! (A sort of spoiler: there is a YouTube video mentioned by name. Said video is real. I watched it.) I don't do real spoilers, so what I may have Googled to do a bit of fact checking will have to remain my secret.

It is most important for a writer to have a unique voice to stand out in the crowd. That unique voice often expresses itself by presenting the story from an unexpected perspective. Susan May's voice is crystal clear and loud enough to reach you on page one. What might she be saying? Reader! Pay attention!

Kendall Jennings is a strong, but flawed, female character. Honestly, I prefer my characters, both male and female, flawed. It makes them believable because real people are flawed. Here we have a stand alone novel populated with very real characters. Folks you might meet at sometime in your life. I mention that is is a stand alone novel because at several points I found myself thinking that this is a story with characters that have lives, and lives go on.

If you read the author bio on Amazon, you will see that Susan May hails from Australia, so you might think she would put her story in a locale down under. Not so. DEADLY MESSENGERS is set in a fictitious city in the U. S. You know this because guns are readily available, the FBI is mentioned, and the subject is mass murder. Where else on earth would multiple mass murders even make for a believable story? There are occasional places in the book where she may not get the Americanism just right but when you are reading a thriller like this one, who cares about such trivia. This is. without a doubt, one of the best books I have read this year. If I could give it six stars, I certainly would!

On a technical note, I did find several places where a word seemed like it had been left out of a sentence, the tense of a verb didn't seem to fit, a singular noun that should have been plural... They seemed like the kind of mistakes made when thinking faster than one is able to commit them to page. My brain made the corrections so quickly they really didn't much interrupt the flow of this very fast paced novel.

The bottom line is this is a book well worth the time you spend reading it.

This review is based on the ARC sent to me by Susan May.

galian84's review against another edition

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4.0

I was looking for a good mystery-thriller book, and when this popped up as a suggested book on my Kindle, I grabbed it. It didn't disappoint! Action packed from start to end, it definitely kept me on my toes. I also like how Ms. May got into the murders relatively quickly, and to find the perpetrator and the reasons behind it all was something new and exciting to me (especially being in the healthcare field. Definitely gives you some food for thought...). Satisfying ending that tied up all loose ends.

And while I always like a good romance and love story, I thought the romantic subplot between the journalist and the cop felt a bit out of place. And perhaps it was just me, but something about the FMC's name nagged at me...likely not the author's fault, but it kept reminding me of one of the Kardashian sisters and I kept envisioning her as such.

Well written and I would look for other works by Ms. May in the future.

aly36's review against another edition

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5.0

I enjoyed this book very much. This book had some mystery and I love to read about serial killers too. This book kept me reading more and I didn't want to put the book down. I could see this book be a movie some day! I think it was very good. * I received this book from the author in exchange for an honest review*

jonetta's review against another edition

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4.0

Originally posted on The Book Nympho

This story takes hold of you after the first couple of pages and never really lets you go. Seemingly law abiding, well adjusted people are suddenly and inexplicably committing mass murders in one town. Freelance writer Kendall Jennings, who normally does fillers for lifestyle publications, drifts into covering the story and runs afoul of the chief investigator, Detective Lance O'Grady. Both are trying to figure out a connection between the killers and their motives.

I enjoyed the hunt for clues and exploring the source of the phenomenon. It's an unusual premise, which kept things interesting. Both Kendall and Lance have extraordinary histories that are slowly revealed throughout the story, adding additional layers to the puzzle. I sort of figured out what was going on before it was revealed but the climax was still riveting. The author excels at writing thrilling scenes and I could literally feel my pulse racing. The pacing was outstanding.

The only weakness in the story is the relationship between Kendall and Lance but even that was okay. It was sometimes a distraction but not much. I thoroughly enjoyed the book.

(I received an ARC from the author in exchange for an honest review)

chimerraaa's review against another edition

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1.0

This book wasn't worth my while. Why? I'll explain right away.Let's begin with the plot:
Plot
A wave of mass murders has struck a peaceful town. Two detectives and a freelance writer are trying to find out why. A powerful drug is involved - drug which gives one person the opportunity to control other people's minds and make them do the killings in spite of their own will. Which sounds like the perfect crime but the execution of the idea was beyond poor. When I read crime/mystery/ thriller I expect some suspense. Not predictability. Given that there was only one suspect (who turned out to be the bad guy.Surprising, heh?) the book really gives the reader nothing to dwell on beyond a stupid cheesy love interest.
Characters
Kendall Whatever-her-name-was
She is the freelance writer, not very talented from what I gathered. What we know about her: she has blue eyes, nice hair, her mother was killed in robbery gone wrong, she doesn't do her dishes and doesn't wash her clothes. It's actually mentioned a few times like it's the most important thing about her. Somehow she stumbles upon a witness of the first mass murder while she writes an article about the event although her sphere is writing fluffy pieces for women's magazines - you know "Hollywood lips without effort" and such.How she ended up investigating and writing about the killings is beyond me. She was so out of place. It didn't suit her character at all. While writing her first article Kendall stumbles upon the file of another mass killing in their city which happened 20 years earlier. And this is the point (about 30% in the book) when the reader already knows who the real murderer -the puppet master- is. I don't like knowing who the perp is before the detective. I like being surprised in the end. I like the unexpected when I can tell: "Oh, it really blew my mind". It isn't the case with this book. Also, we are constantly reminded that Kendall's mother was killed 8 years ago and Kendall's still fighting her grief and whatnot but this story line isn't explored in depth. It's all too shallow like the author had this really good idea but couldn't exploit it.
Detective Lance O'Grady
He's one of the detectives. What we know about him: he has beautiful eyes, he has nice hair (what's with people's hair and eyes in this book?), his brother was driven to suicide by journalists so it's insta-hate/love between him and Kendall. He isn't a good detective as far as I can tell. All he did was have a hunch, watch some videos, read a folder, check something in Google and complain about the lack of sleep. Then he somehow he put 2 and 2 together and it equaled "the perp wasn't really trying to escape justice". Isn't he a genius? He's not exactly your star-detective. And all the time he and Kendall have those internal monologues: "Why I like him/her so much? Why is he/she constantly in my mind? He is rude/ she is bottom feeder journalist. Why can't I stop thinking about him/ her?" Oh, I don't know, you tell me, Einstein! I hate it when they do that. At this point I was ready to take the infamous axegive them both a nice new haircut...maybe trim a little bit of their heads....When I like a man's hair, a man's eyes, when I think he's sexy I at least admit it to myself like: "Oh, he's cute and I would really love to jump his bones, but I'm married so I won't act on it but I like him all the same." It isn't difficult, you should try.
Trip Lindsey
Detective O'Grady's other half. What we know about him: he's bald! What does it mean - Kendall doesn't really like him. But he likes Kendall. Surprise!... Not really.

Overall, all the book was very shallow. The author was clearly out of her depth. This is the first Susan May's book I ever read, so I don't know what her usual genre is but I highly recommend for her to stick to it and don't try to write thrillers which aren't thrilling at all. The idea was good. Really good. Imagine what a real vicious killer could do with a mind controlling drug. He could wreck all kinds of havoc! Impressive. Instead... we have this unexplored in depth plot, those shallow characters and the author's detached tone of writing. As I said - not worth my while.

dom1976's review against another edition

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5.0

First of all I would like to thank the author for giving an advanced copy of this novel.

A very fast, gripping and exciting book! it keeps you guessing all the way to the end. What made three people who have ordinary lives do the unthinkable and kill 4 people? They seem to have one thing in common: the twisting of their necks and the phrase "Straight and true", what does it mean? Freelance journalist Kendall Jennings and detective Lance O'Grady are on the case and will be shocked when they are face with the answer.

A truly intelligent suspense/thriller novel!