Shadows at
Dusk is Elizabeth’s
Goddard newest book. I have read several
of her books and looked forward to reading her latest mystery.
Shadows at
Dusk tells the story of
Detective Trevor West who is searching in Alaska for his sister Jennifer Warren
who disappeared over a year ago. Trevor
is a former US Marshal and knows how to track people. But will he be able to solve the case that is
most important to him? He enlists the
help of Alaskan bush pilot Carrie James to help him follow Jennifer’s trail. Reluctantly, Carrie agrees to help him. Not long into their journey it appears that
someone does not want them to continue their search and will do whatever it
takes to stop them. But who exactly is
the target? Is it Trevor or is it
Carrie?
Let me start with
the things I liked about this book. I
enjoyed learning about beauty of this vast, remote, and treacherous terrain. I liked the character Trevor, he seemed like caring,
determined, and faithful friend. I liked
Rip who was willing to help them on their mission, even at great risk to
himself.
I struggled greatly
with this book for several reasons. I
hate it when characters do something stupid and illogical that puts them at
risk and in danger. Both Trevor and
Carrie did that repeatedly throughout this story. At times even acknowledging that they made a
bad decision or calculation. But they never
seemed to learn from their mistakes. Things
like not making copies or photographs of key pieces of evidence. Not giving that evidence to the police.
The storyline did not
seem plausible. From the bad guy behind
it all and those who were helping him try to stop Trevor and Carrie. It appears that someone from Carrie’s past might
also be targeting Trevor. Speaking of
Carrie, I did not like or connect with her character. This story stretched the imagination, not in
a good way. The story was not believable. Because the characters continued to make unwise
and illogical decisions, over and over again, I stopped caring about them. I did not understand why a trained law enforcement
officer would make some of the irrational decisions he did.
There was very
little about God or faith mentioned in the book.
From my
perspective, I did not like Shadows at Dusk by Elizabeth Goddard. The storyline was not believable. Characters made illogical decisions that put
them at risk throughout the story. The
story drug on and on. It was too complicated
and convoluted.
I have read other
stories by Elizabeth Goddard and enjoyed them and would like to read more
in the future. But Shadows at Dusk
missed the mark and I would not recommend it.
I would like to
thank Revell Publishers and NetGalley for the opportunity to read a
complimentary copy of Shadows at Dusk by Elizabeth Goddard. I was under no obligations to give a
favorable review.
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