Rating: 3.4 / 5
Much as I hate to say it, I think that Ms. Thompson's formula on this series is getting rather stale. Reasons explained below:
The same plot devices are being used over and over and over again, and...
It's getting far too predictable, which is the absolute worst thing that a mystery can become. Essentially, where before I loved seeing the characters in action because I couldn't think of what they would do next, now I feel as though they're going through their processes in a step-by-step motion, sort of a "yeah, we've done this before and now we'll do it again, blah blah blah" attitude. It just isn't engaging, and doesn't make me care about them solving the mystery. Without the intrigue of the "how", the "what" just doesn't seem to matter as much.
The "twist" to the story is on that Thompson has already used before, so...
I've already seen it, and it's not as shocking as what she probably intended. This leads me to conclude that Thompson really is grasping at straws and, having lost inspiration and finding herself short of original ideas, is thinking to recycle old ones that her readers have probably forgotten about. If I were a reader going through this series from the beginning and reading each book in the year it came out, then, yes, in twenty years or so I might forget one of the old plot twists that she included. But, sadly, having read them all this year, the plot "twist" in this one is literally just a rehash of something that Thompson's already written better in a previous novel in this series.
Thompson is shying away from the cute personal tidbits of the series, and that's bad because...
The personal tidbits were also some of the most enjoyable bits of what I was reading. Not only did they show character development in ways that being the simple detective could not, but they also gave well-needed relief from an otherwise tense plot of murder. This novel isn't particularly tense, mind you, but I'm sure that Thompson intended it to be, so there's no excuse for why she isn't developing her characters more. For instance, why in the heck does Sarah keep referring to Frank as "Malloy", even in private when it's just between the two of them? I mean, for goodness' sake, they are married, so why the formality? It just doesn't make sense, and thus annoys me. Also, what about the cuteness of Catherine and Brian being exploited more beyond just "demanding the adults' attention, which of course they give at the appropriate moments, etc."? Or Maeve and Gino being more romantic together and also contributing more to the mystery solving? This is one of the most stale elements by far, and characteristic of writer's block--when you don't know how to move the characters forward.
OVERALL, my biggest problem is that...
It feels like there is no plot development in this series anymore. A lot of people pinpoint Frank's becoming a millionaire as when things went downhill, but for me, it happened a bit earlier than that, and I kept waiting for it to pick back up again. After Book 12 is when it started to go downhill for me as a series, with a slight break for Books 16 and 17, which I quite enjoyed. But, basically, it seems that Thompson has worn out her own characters and plot ideas, which is what happens all too often with a series that has gone on for too long. Basically, once you've "milked out" all the good ideas and you don't have anymore, you resort to any desperate measures to keep the series going, even at the inevitable compromise of quality. Very few series manage to make something better and better after so many books, and, unfortunately, Thompson is not one of those few. My problems can be summed up as follows:
- there is no plot progression for Frank and Sarah--they have both become generic and boring, with no personality development, no insight into their married life or their family life, nothing.
- there is no development for side characters like Gino and Maeve either, because Thompson seems content to leave them in the corner of "null and void", from whence she cannot pick them back up again, lacking any ideas or ability to do so.
- the mysteries are getting repetitive, and the methods never change.
In other words, I'm starting to lose my grasp on why I should care about this series at all anymore, since Thompson is clearly half-assing her efforts at this point. Out of respect for what I have liked so far, I'm refraining from giving this book any lower than a 3-star rating, but, as a whole, I'm really going to have to put this series on hold until I stomach the nerve to continue on with the two remaining books. Unless Thompson really picks up the story in some way, I'm afraid she's going to lose a lot more readers.