Posted on Les Romantiques - Le forum du site
Reviewed by Rinou
Review Copy from the Publisher
Wicked Ways is the fourth volume in the Wicked series written by Lisa Jackson and Nancy Bush, two sisters known for their romantic suspense. Having just read before and with trouble the first volume, Wicked Games, upon its publication in French, I took on reading WW with apprehension. Fortunately for me it’s less boring, even if I wasn’t convinced for all that.
In WW we follow Elizabeth, who’s just learned the death of her husband and his mistress in a suspect car accident. She’s freaked out because they had quarreled some days before, and she had wished for him to die. She realizes that for the third time she has wished someone’s death or disappearance and that has come true. I don’t know about you, but when I get angry at someone I don’t for all that wish he dies. But our heroine does. And some times later same scenario with a fourth person, indeed a reason to freak out. In spite of this interesting hook, I didn’t really liked Elizabeth, I found her too meek, most of the time she lets herself be pushed around by her (numerous) friends while complaining inside. Her five years old daughter has more personality than herself (and unfortunately that gives us a capricious and ill-mannered child).
Alternately we follow Ravinia, a young girl who grew up in the closed community created by her mother and her aunt, and who has been send to look for her adopted cousin to warn her of a possible danger (the all series is about this community whose members and descendents have diverse mental powers). Ravinia is resourceful, frank and straightforward. In fact I found her much more interesting than her cousin.
To complete her mission successfully, she ends up hiring a private investigator, Rex, to whom she give the spiel until he accepts to help her. Rex seems quite a decent character, but I thought he was not detailed enough. He’s often disconcerted by Ravinia’s volubility and tactics, and it was funny to see him yield little by little to her desire to help him in his investigations.
What about the romance? Well, the couple, that is Rex and Elizabeth, only meet in the last quarter of the book, and it’s love at first sight. For all that, in these last chapters, they only see each other three times in as many days, so don’t wait for a big romance and big feelings. Even the epilogue, which takes place several days/weeks after the conclusion, stays quite lukewarm even if there are projects to move together that are mentioned.
As for the suspense side, if it begins quite interestingly I found the story dragged on, with repetitions and unnecessary parts when you wait for the investigation to progress. Here and there we have a glimpse of the killer’s thoughts, but it’s swallowed in the middle of the heroines’ daily activities. And the end leaves some questions unanswered, which either will never have any answer, or will be resolved in the next, as the authors finish the book with the next bad guy (he was seemingly the bad guy in a previous volume, which made me think of the catchphrase for King Kong Lives in French : “he comes back and he’s not happy” that has become a parody now).
To conclude, if WW is less tiresome to read than WG (inevitably, with 200 pages less the big blah-blah problem of the first has been corrected) it wasn’t for all that a good reading. As I’ve been so far disappointed by what I read from them, I abandon definitively these two authors.