The Art of Vanishing by Cynthia Kuhn was twisted as f*$k, but in a good way.
Lila is at it again with another mystery falling in her lap.
The settings were short and sweet, but there was enough detail in the 2-3 sentences that you got the idea of where they were. Even descriptions like the windy mountain roads in dialogue. Now that’s something you don’t see too often, description in dialogue. Quite refreshing.
The characters are continuing to grow on me. I like how you can tell the difference between the characters by the language used. If someone is scholarly, they talk scholarly. If someone was a student or a common person, they talked like I do. Even Violet talked like the artist she is. I wish Nate had been in the story more, but maybe the next one. The one character who disappointed me was Lex (not Cynthia’s fault, it’s just a pet peeve of mine). There were hints of potential romance between the amateur sleuth and the cop (Lex). Not again! Lila does mystery solving so well on her own, can’t we let the cop romance angle go in this series? Just MHO, anyway.
I didn’t feel there were too many new characters, I could keep them all straight.
There was not a lot of exposition, just enough to make the mandatory stuff available to the readers.
The plot was outrageous! I loved all the twists and turns. Every time there was breathing room, Cynthia threw something else at you immediately after, to start the roller coaster again. But like I said, the pace was good, because of all the breathers then the actions. The clues were there, but they were not seen as real clues at the time. But in the end, when the clues were revealed, you say “Oh yeah, I remember that! Dang that was slick!”
I want more of the subplot of the struggle being a beginning teacher, and can’t wait for that in the future books. It makes for interesting reading, and makes one think back to their high school dates or college days and see what our educators went through to be a success.
I don’t know if there was closure with Gilles and Alonzo (the 2 visitors). They seemed to be secretive about something, but it didn’t come out in the ending. At least not that I noticed (I apologize if I missed it).
And even at the resolution, you were wondering who did what, because everyone was pointing fingers at everyone. But it was wrapped up totally neatly.
I give this 4.5 stars only because of me missing my Nate, and the one non-resolution party. I can’t wait to read #3!