A review by baby_casserole
Dare to Know by James Kennedy

reflective slow-paced

3.0

You know when someone tells you a really choice piece of gossip and you are hanging on to every word of the story as they are slowly working up to tell you the really good bit. The part that will make you immediately want to tell everyone you know. And then they drop the bomb and you have no idea who they are talking about. While the gossip is juicy and there's a satsifaction in hearing it, ultimately it means nothing to you. That's sort of how this felt. The story and it's build to some conclusion drew me in. But was that conclusion profound or insipid? I don't know. In the end the whole thing felt like a nihilistic ode the mediocrity of life.