Ratings2
Average rating4.5
I thoroughly enjoyed this novel for its immersive setting in the early days of Hollywood, as well as for its mystery plot. I was engaged throughout and looked forward to picking the book up again after putting it down. That said, I have a degree in film and I am obsessed with murder mysteries so this novel centered around two of my biggest interests. I particularly liked the protagonist, Mary Rourke, and favored the chapters that followed her versus the Louisiana subplot.
I knocked it down a star because it had a few imperfections that bothered me: namely, the first chapter, the high body count, and the elongated ending that didn't leave me fully satisfied. I almost put the book down thinking I'd made a mistake after the first page. The author has a fondness for (take note) double-word adjectives that got more tolerable over time but the first couple paragraphs had excessive detail describing the desert. I'm glad I kept going with it.
My biggest gripe is that the author really played up the antagonist as evil incarnate and, I don't know about everyone else, but when we're dealing with a stark good versus evil binary, I want good to prevail with a magnificent flourish in the end. Otherwise, there needs to be more grey area. There were so many (I mean, so many) deaths that were the result of being brainwashed by pure evil that I was ready for the antagonist to finally meet their match in the end.
Besides that, I would recommend this one to fans of noir mystery and old Hollywood.