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256 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2014
Absolutely nothing in this book made sense to me. At all.
The characters hardly know eachother as well as can't stand eachother, yet throughout the book it's played off as if they've all known eachother for years? What? How does Dahlia magically know all these things about everyone when they've hardly spent any time together? "So and so is very ___" How does she know this? How are we supposed to know this? You would also think with the characters being randomly grabbed by their awful ringleader that they would all have different skills used in whatever case they're doing (which I couldn't decipher at all at any point) but no. It's just "What do you think this means, guys?" Come ON.
I also don't know WHAT they were doing the ENTIRE TIME. Absolutely NOTHING was explained, yet somehow characters kept saying "everything is starting to make sense!" Is it really? No. It's not. All you get from the start is "we're young people and we're gonna make a difference! We're gonna shut this corporation down!" Somehow they have a meet up in Europe with biker Nazis, but they never reappear again and I wonder, what was the point of that? They go to "gather information". What information? What THING are you even looking into information FOR? There's no reason given, no explanation, no plot point. Just "getting information".
Then there's this stuff with Sayeed, who's labelled a terrorist, and they meet up with him too, but you can't tell if he's supposed to be a good resource for them to band forces with or another bad guy to "get information" from. Somehow a farm pill is involved, somehow Sayeed wants (or doesn't want? WE JUST DON'T KNOW!) something to do with it, and the characters suddenly need to put a stop to him. I don't have a clue what anyone in any of the three parties were supposed to do, what their mission was. Nothing. Somehow it ends with Sayeed's hired army getting killed (from what? from who? WHAT?) and two characters get fixed up in a car. Then they return to their normal lives. Somehow they saved or destroyed a company that was or was going to be associated with C-8. I seriously don't have a clue.
Also, what was the thing with constantly, not just as a description, but THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE BOOK, every person of color's race is mentioned eighteen hundred times? What is Dahlia's obsession with calling Mei-Mei a porcelain doll? I couldn't stand it! Not to mention Mei-Mei is supposed to be a smart young woman and an important part of their team, a master of chess, yet she's treated by Dahlia like she's as dumb as a stump and the only thing interesting about her is how much she "looks like a porcelain doll". Ugh!
So, in conclusion, absolutely no character development, and a SERIOUS lack of explanation on ANY kind of task in this book. The only reason I finished was because it was short and I willed myself to power through. Since this is the author's last book, it wouldn't surprise me at all if this was actually nowhere near complete when published. There are a couple other books of his I was interested in reading, which appear to be a lot more well liked. However, this just wasn't very good.
C-8 had backed off from acquiring another company. For now.