Reviews

Shine Your Light On Me by Lee Thompson

100pagesaday's review against another edition

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4.0

Aiden LeDoux would just like to be a normal kid, someone who flies under the radar. However, that is unlikely after his father is literally crucified by the son of a man who he has wronged. One night while at his father's bar, Aiden feels overwhelmed and uncomfortable. In his anxiety a bright light bursts from his face, illuminating the entire bar. To add to that, anyone who was bathed in the light is now healed of any physical malady, from a scratch or scar to cancer. Of course the miraculous event spreads like wildfire, and the small town becomes ignited by zealotry by Aiden's miracle. Aiden is now being held hostage by those who will do anything to have him perform the miracle again.

This book threw me for a loop; simultaneously diving right into the action and setting the scene, I was thrown into a small town bar that Aiden's father, Jack owns. Immediately, I had a feel for many of the characters and the varied dynamics between them. Then, everything changes. I was amazed at how quickly the town turned. However, some people remained the same. Aiden really becomes a side character and the focus turns on how the town reacts to him. The horror was not in Aiden's incident, but the quick turnaround to chaos, panic and illogical thinking that takes over an overwhelming amount of people. Pine, the brother responsible for Jack's injury was easily the most terrifying character and could probably have an entire book written about his antics. There were a few plot holes for me, especially the absence of any law enforcement until the end. Overall, a well crafted book that looks into the dynamics of small town incidents with well placed elements of horror and psychological thriller.

This book was received for free in return for an honest review.

nadoislandgirl's review against another edition

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I don't really like giving books only one star, but I couldn't even muster up enough energy to finish this short book. There was a lot of violence, much of it completely senseless. I couldn't understand where any of these characters were coming from and why a simple action would result in an over-the-top and violent reaction. Not my cup of tea.

charshorrorcorner's review

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4.0

Shine Your Light On Me dumps you directly into the local town bar just as an "incident"occurs that changes young Aiden's life forever.

As this story progresses, we learn more about the small town where Aiden lives, why everyone now wants a piece of him, and why Lee Thompson is such a good writer.

I can't say much without spoilers, but I can say that, as usual, Lee brings these characters alive. Small town life seems to fit with his writing style perfectly. He seems to know how things are in these communities and the stresses that life there can cause.

Will Aiden be able to "see" his way out out of town and be allowed to live the life of his choosing? Or will the town and its residents drag him on down? You will have to read this novella to find out!

Recommended for fans of dark fiction and when I say that I mean DARK, even though that light is shining.

You can buy your copy here: http://www.amazon.com/Shine-Your-Light-Lee-Thompson-ebook/dp/B01BGL7V80/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1457636488&sr=1-1&keywords=shine+your+light+on+me

*I received a free e-copy of this novella from Shock Totem in exchange for an honest review. This is it!** I am proud to call Lee an online friend of mine, but that did not influence my review one way or another, because that's how we roll.**

mikekaz's review against another edition

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3.0

This is one of those times where I wish the 5 stars ratings had a bit more granular scoring. I'm giving the book 3.5 stars but rounding it down instead. While the book wasn't bad, it was not up to the usual quality that I expect when I rate a book with 4 stars.

While I normally do my best to avoid all spoilers, there might be some small ones included here. The story jumps immediately to Aiden LeDoux and his friends hanging out at his father's bar. The bar loses power and while the power is coming back online, Aiden unexpectedly emits a light of his own. A light that heals everyone in the same room of any ailment that they have. The rest of the story then deals with what happened and how people (those in the bar and the town) react to it.

In my mind, it's a good idea and one that has potential. One of my problems though was that the readers were thrust into the story too fast. I was still figuring out who was who when I then had to switch to their reactions to what happened. And there was a lot of character depth that shown but not explained. During the light emitting, the story casually mentions Aiden's father's crucifixion. Wait a second, literal or figurative? That's a more than casual line drop event. And it turns out to be literal! Then another character is introduced as a stepmother, "a wildly beautiful woman that so many men in the area craved", but her relationship status is confusing because she's at the bar with her stepson and not her husband. Personally I think those problems could have been easily solved by providing the readers with more story and character development from before the "light shining event". Another 50 pages would have explained a lot of the history and characters and avoided that initial confusion. That would have also helped to care about the characters more. So much was happening and characters were reacting but I didn't really care about what happened or who got hurt. I wasn't emotionally invested in anyone because I didn't really know anyone. I couldn't sympathize. If the book had been a novel instead of a novella, that would have helped. And my final big complaint was the missing police. Through the entire story, the police didn't show up for any of the deaths, crucifixion, fights, mobs, or home destruction. They do show up at the very end to take reports and clean up the dead bodies but that's it. With everything that happened, I can't believe that no one called the police until way after everything is finished. I don't mean to be that harsh because I enjoyed the premise of the story. And while the town citizens' actions might be extreme, they do make some sense. As I said at the start of the review, I have mixed feelings: good premise, key plot points that are interesting, not quite enough to make me care. I have another three books by Thompson on my To-Be-Read pile; hopefully one or more are novel length and I like them more so than this one.

onewingedpsycho's review against another edition

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2.0

You know I really hate to give a book a one star rating but nothing about this one made sense, it was in my opinion poorly written and poorly thought out. Why the hell wouldn't you go to the police if a pair of psycho's nailed you to a damn tree?!

So many people in this book died completely needlessly, there was a whole secondary plot regarding a school bombing that went nowhere! Utterly pointless on the part of the author to include it. I only finished the book because it was too short not to and yes I did at points have hopes that something would happen to make it all make sense but unfortuntly it didn't. Also it was difficult to follow the dialogue as the "speaker" was changed so often. I'm sure the authors other books (and there were enough of them advertised in the back of this one on my kindle!) are better but this is certainly not the first book you'd want to pick up by Lee Thompson as it would easily put you off reading his other books.
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