Rating (Out of 5): ~2
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Spoilers?: Vague.
Goodreads Synopsis:
Nora Grey's life is
still far from perfect. Surviving an attempt on her life wasn't
pleasant, but at least she got a guardian angel out of it: a mysterious,
magnetic, gorgeous guardian angel. But, despite his role in her life,
Patch has been acting anything but angelic. He's more elusive than ever
and even worse, he's started spending time with Nora's arch-enemy,
Marcie Millar.
Nora would have hardly noticed Scott Parnell, an old family friend who has moved back to town, if Patch hadnt been acting so distant. Even with Scott's totally infuriating attitude Nora finds herself drawn to him - despite her lingering feeling that he's hiding something.
Haunted by images of her murdered father, and questioning whether her nephilim bloodline has anything to do with his death, Nora puts herself increasingly in dangerous situations as she desperately searches for answers. But maybe some things are better left buried, because the truth could destroy everything - and everyone - she trusts.
Nora would have hardly noticed Scott Parnell, an old family friend who has moved back to town, if Patch hadnt been acting so distant. Even with Scott's totally infuriating attitude Nora finds herself drawn to him - despite her lingering feeling that he's hiding something.
Haunted by images of her murdered father, and questioning whether her nephilim bloodline has anything to do with his death, Nora puts herself increasingly in dangerous situations as she desperately searches for answers. But maybe some things are better left buried, because the truth could destroy everything - and everyone - she trusts.
Review:
I hate Nora. Hate her, hate her, hate her.
That’s, um, pretty
much the biggest emotional feeling I have toward this book. Because I hate
Nora, you guys. She’s just so stupid and irrational and practically emotionally
unstable and immature and lets everyone get inside her head and keeps denying
things even though they are staring her in the face. And she pretended that she
was a nice person and stayed to do meaningless conversation with two different
people that she was fighting with, for no reason other than they were in her
path. What is up with that? It’s okay to just pass people, without saying
something to them, okay? And she really needs to learn to trust people, Patch
in particular, and especially when they have given no reason for you not to.
And she’s way too caught in the fact that Patch can’t feel physical touch; he
can still feel emotions! Get over it already. I hate how conflicting she was,
too. How she would pull away from him and then want to be with him, want him to
leave her alone, want to hate him, and then want him to tell her he loves her.
And that no matter how much she would try to hate him and be away from him, at
the first sight of him, she would stare and kiss him given the slightest
chance. I just… I just want to punch her in the face or something, okay?
Anyway, this was
the second book in the Hush, Hush series, and I had much higher hopes for it
than what it gave me. First of all, I was hoping to see more of Patch and Nora
being together and actually falling in love and all of that. What I got, was
the two getting into a fight almost immediately into the book, and then Nora
making dumb decisions and being angsty about it the rest of the book. And I
mean the rest of the book. That was practically the whole plot to this
over-four-hundred-page-book: Nora being upset about her decisions about Patch.
She told him she loved him at the beginning of the book, after, like, two weeks
(maybe it was two months? Not that much longer, really, and not showing any of
their closeness to the reader at all) of being together and with showing no
reason to why she is in love with him, and then they got in a fight. And he
tried to make things better, did nothing wrong, but she continued to push him
away and want him to make things better and come apologize (when he did very
little wrong) while making it near impossible for him, because she kept
refusing everything he was saying. It was beyond frustrating. And it was
painful to read.
It really bothers
me that they showed barely any chemistry or actual attraction, or genuine
emotional feelings, toward one another. In the last book, there was the lust
and temptation, and that’s pretty much it, and then in this book, there’s she
loves him and fighting, no getting to know each other, no meaningless or
meaningful conversations, nothing. Nothing at all.
I still like Patch.
He wasn’t irrational or stubborn or trying to ruin their relationship. He was
actually trying to help her and make things better, no matter how many times
she ruined it for him. The one thing that bothers me about him is that he keeps
trying to help her and actually likes her. Why? I don’t like her. He deserves
much better than her.
There was a little
bit of plot, aside from the relationship angst. (A little bit.) There was some
drama with Scott, an old childhood friend of Nora’s, who is mixed up with the
archangels and all of that business (also, Scott is described as boyish a few
times, despite everything else about him and described about him that points to
the opposite. This just confused me) (oh, and she called what her mother set up
between her and Scott a ‘meet cute’. What does that mean? I mean, I got the
gist of it because of context, but I’d never heard the phrase before. Do people
actually say that?). There are some complications with Patch’s being Nora’s
guardian angel. Some stuff happens with Marcie Millar (which, honestly, seems a
little ridiculous to me. And much too dramatic. A little childish, even.)
Again, within the last thirty, fifty, or whatever, pages, someone tried to kill
Nora. (Someone who upset me, because I actually liked him a bit, even though I
suspected as much.)
A lot of drama was
brought up with Nora’s father. Which was kind of stupid, in my opinion. There
was a bit of a surprising twist near the end of the book, which she totally
overreacted to, but other than that, it just seemed dumb. Mostly because Nora
never really thought much of her father, or felt any sorrow for him, until it
was convenient for someone to mess with her mind about him, or because it gave
a reason for her to do something about his death. None of it seemed like
sincere sorrow to me.
Also, it still
bothers me that she’s so easy. She has almost no willpower. She fights but
gives into Patch much too easily, and then just about anyone can get into her
mind. She needs to get a bit stronger, but I see very little chance of that
happening.
The ending was a
bit lame, too. Just like in the first book, not a lot of actual plot movement
happened until the last fifty-ish pages, when someone tries to kill Nora and so
she has to run and be saved and all that. It actually kind of annoys me.
So, yea, I really
didn’t enjoy this book. I like Patch, and the whole archangel-angel thing
interests me, but there just isn’t enough focus on it. I have the next one
already, and so I will try to read it, but I don’t know how that will work out.
I can really only hope that it doesn’t suck. And that I can get through it
quickly, and not spend as much time on it as this one took. (But, really, it’s
about the same size. Doubtful that I will get through the book quickly.)
Happy Reading, and Happy Birthday (to me and anyone else!)!
Happy Reading, and Happy Birthday (to me and anyone else!)!
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