Nondisclosure proclaims itself a thriller, and that is exactly what you receive. With strong plot and compelling mystery I was entertained and engaged for the entire novel. There were very few issues with the book, but it still wasn’t the kind of story that will change your life. While I wasn’t unhappy or dissatisfied with the story’s end, I was left wanting a stronger sense of emotional closure, however small.
I don’t read many thrillers because they tend to feel very cookie cutter. Nondisclosure also came with the added red flag of a male author addressing assault and the effects of the #MeToo movement. Thrillers and mystery have a bad habit of glorifying the violence performed against women. But I was pleasantly surprised by this novel. The book certainly had its predictable moments, but the academic backdrop and modern subject matter gave enough flavor to overcome that. Geoffrey Cooper made it clear from the start where he stood on the issue, quelling my fears and allowing me to enjoy the ride with the exception of one moment which left me feeling a little sour.
The plot and pacing were this book’s greatest strength. The twists were well placed, as well as unexpected but believable. The subplots were tightly tied together, leaving no loose ends behind. It is one of the few books to deliver on the rare joy of utilizing nearly every detail to advance the plot. But this did leave the details and description very sparse for my taste, and I would have enjoyed one or two moments of the story using description to heighten the tension or give us some more visual detail. I ended the book still unsure what the narrator really looked like. But I understand sacrificing imagery for the sake of a light step, which this story certainly had. I never felt bored, and sprinted through the story, gathering up the subtle crumbs of evidence scattered consistently throughout. I was strung along in the best way possible.
Most of the time I was totally immersed in the world, believing tensions and motivations. The biggest break for me was the romance subplot, which started out feeling a little forced and predictable without adding much else to the story. This would have been an excellent place to establish emotional growth or set up for the emotional pay off I was craving, but it never came. This is all the more disappointing as the romance had won me over by the end. I can only imagine the impact if it had served a higher purpose.
While the characters felt strong and complete, they didn’t feel alive. I didn’t walk away with particularly strong attachments to them. Their dialogue could be a bit unnatural and I saw them more as archetypes or roles than as individuals. Their lives — and the story — were wrapped up in a bow by the book’s end, leaving things almost too clean. I certainly prefer that to something incoherent or unsatisfying, but I still needed something to tighten the ending.
Nondisclosure was just what it said on the packaging. There wasn’t much to make it stand out and ensure I wold recommend it to readers who aren’t already entrenched in the genre, but if you want a quick, entertaining, adventure, pick this one up.