Nothing very brilliant about the deception in this. I wasn't surprised in the least as to whom the villain was and how it ended.
The characters were so so, if not cliche. Fuller could've really done a better job at fleshing out the characters and relationships. Lily and Colin's came across shallow and superficial, because she added the most description on how it felt when they bumped into each other and no description anywhere else really. I can tell Fuller tried to make them connect on a deeper level, so I give her points for that. I liked Michael's character a lot and Fuller could've gone somewhere with that character (and Emily) and the secret he had, but she didn't and I’m left a little confused as to why she added their quirks and strong characters to this book when they weren't even the main characters. I didn't connect with the characters well, but that might be just me.
The plot fell apart. That's what, in the end, is giving this one star. The book focused more on the romance in it (fall in love, not lust, please!) than on the plot. The plot seemed more of a tacked on after thought. It was slow to begin with and the climax was cliche. The villain monologued, which gave the good guy time to stop him. The ending was as expected. The plot was boring; there could've been so much more action and drama, but as I said, it focused on the romantic aspect only. Normally, that's fine if balanced correctly. Which I obviously find it didn't...
Writing style and dialogue were so so. Definitely not one for description – save when the two leads just bump into each other – but it fit Fuller's style and the novel's length and pace. It really could've been better.
The summary makes it sound like its some big dramatic mystery, which is why I picked it up. Those of you looking for mystery, look elsewhere. People who like quick, romantic books would probably enjoy this.
I can't over look the plot flaw, so this is getting one star.
Would I recommend this? It won't come as a surprise to you when I say NO.