Ratings20
Average rating3.6
Reviews with the most likes.
I'm very confused about this book. I must say that at first, the story was very slow and I was losing interest, but the plot was good and I was trapped; but the story became too long again and I wanted to put it down. Almost at the end, the conflict was very interesting and I finished reading. In conclusion, the story is not good: it is very good but it's long and boring in many parts and also I didn't like the sex scenes. I'll have to think long and hard to read her next book: [b:The Fire 2848984 The Fire Katherine Neville http://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1320441636s/2848984.jpg 2875107]
The Eight is an alternate-history book with a puzzle as the main focus, just like Da Vinci Code or other books of the genre. While there are portions of the story that flourish and keep you turning the page, there are twice as many parts that made me groan or just not care.
Katherine Neville LOVES to name-drop famous historical people. It got to a point where I actually yelled ‘oh come on!' when Napoleon was introduced. This was not the first nor the last of famous people in history that the characters encounter. It took away from the story.
Unfortunately this book also falls into the same trap as all the other puzzle-based books: the end sucks. There is a ton of build-up and no payoff. The Eight is no different and collapses under the weight of its own legend. I give Neville credit for keeping me engaged in the book enough to finish it but I highly doubt I'll pick up the sequel The Fire.
I was enthusiastic for the first third of the book, by half way through however, it started to feel heavy. It seemed to dwell more in the older time period, and much of that was a sappy romance between Mireille and Tallyrand. There is adventure here, but also a lot of fantasy, romance. It did not hold as much mystery or suspense for me. The secret contained in the Montglane service felt forced and over the top.
Featured Series
2 primary booksThe Eight is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 1988 with contributions by Katherine Neville.