Hrrngh. Why would you do this to me, Chris Lynch, why?? I really wanted to like this book; I bought it just because it had his name on it. I read Inexcusable and loved it, and I read Angry Young Man and loved it. But I just couldn't get into this one.
One of my main issues with the book was that it was confusing. I mean, if you don't exactly get what's going on in a story unless you read the cover blurb, then that's confusing. And after reading the whole thing, I STILL don't quite know what was up with Daniel's grandfather. Also, the character's motivations for their actions were at times very confusing. Maybe that's just me. Maybe I'm not manly enough for this book, I don't know. I just failed to understand a lot of it, even though I technically could tell you what was going on.
My other main issue with it was its characters. Angry Young Man was also occasionally slightly confusing, but I didn't care because I loved those characters so much. I even liked his characters in Inexcusable, even though most of them were assholes. I can read about mean/violent/crazy people, but I want to like or understand them at least. And at first, I did like the characters. But Daniel turned from a passive everyday kinda guy to a violent person, and I just didn't follow his transformation.
And Da. Don't even get me started. I liked him at first, but I slowly grew to despise him as the book went on. I'm sure there's a trope for the mentor-type figure who abuses the main character into learning some lesson or another, I just don't know its name. And furthermore, I hate that trope. Da was arrogant, threw baseballs at Daniel's ears, treated his son like crap, and almost choked Lucy. He also never liked Jarrod, despite Jarrod doing a ton of things to help them out. Maybe that was the point of his character, but I liked the way he started out, and at that point I could see why his grandson so adored him. By the middle of the book, I wanted Daniel and Jarrod to throw him to the side of the road.
Lucy and Jarrod were my favorite characters, by the way, and they were the most abused. Often for no reason.
And the entire plot made me feel like I missed something. Like I said, motivations were unclear. Like, first Daniel is helping his grandfather miss a doctor's appointment and suddenly they're running for their...lives? I think? With no clear plan/destination in mind? And it's never clear if Daniel even believes his grandfather's wacky stories anyway. I don't know. I just. Didn't. Get it.
But just because I didn't like it in this case doesn't mean it's not good. Some people really liked this book, and maybe they got something I didn't, or connected with the characters in a way I couldn't. Hence the two stars; I hated it, but it wasn't terrible. Read it if it sounds interesting to you, I guess.