A review by eyreguide
The Reluctant Assassin by Eoin Colfer

3.0

This was a fun story, but after I read it, I really didn't find it all that memorable. I think it's mostly personal preference since it's hard to put my finger on what it was I disliked - or rather failed to like. The characters were interesting, the story moves pretty quickly, and the time travel aspect is involved and intriguing. Perhaps the only thing I can fault is in the villain Garrick who was so annoyingly superior, was often way ahead of everyone, yet in the end everything was too easily resolved.

Riley and Chevie have a really fun relationship because they are both so different from each other. I enjoyed their banter and Chevie's sometimes caustic personality. It was easy to see why the two got along though, and I felt that their interactions really held this story together. I appreciated the grounding believability of Riley and Chevie because there are some colorful and exaggerated characters in this story which felt a little jarring at times. They were sometimes Dickensian, and sometimes just over-the-top and it was hard to believe that they were really very dangerous. Because it is mostly the threatening characters in Victorian England who were so outrageous. Garrick was often seen as the most dangerous - almost superhuman in his cunning and fighting ability - yet it was really hard to feel that menace come through in the story which I think made it harder to immerse myself in the narrative. Garrick is a well drawn character though because his past and his mind are so complicated and it is interesting to learn more about him as the story develops.

The pure adventure of the story is appealing though, and I would recommend this to anyone who is a fan of the author, or for time travel romps. Probably a readiness to suspend disbelief would help as well. And because I really liked Riley and Chevie's dynamic it might be interesting to see how they are developed further in the next book.