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The Devil You Know

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Tom used to be a lot of assassin, interrogator, sadist. But for the past decade he's worked on being a better person, a good father to his loving daughter. But for a man with his past, a bullet is the only end he can expect—he just hopes his daughter will survive the inevitable fallout.

Doro has no illusions about provocateur, infiltrator, killer. Even though he's one of the youngest assets the Vaylen Crime Family puts in the field, he's skilled and eager to prove himself.

After years of civil war, the Family has finally settled, and their leader wants to tie up loose ends. That includes sending Doro to get rid of the only man to ever walk away from the Family, the man once known as The Devil.

91 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 12, 2017

53 people want to read

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Camilla Quinn

7 books5 followers

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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Dev.
2,462 reviews187 followers
January 18, 2018
I received a free copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review

Wow, this was so much better than I was expecting! I wish this was a full-length novel, but there IS room for a sequel so maybe we'll get that one day [pretty please]. I really liked all the main characters; Tom and Doro both had very interesting backstories and it was great to watch their little game of cat and mouse. Tom's daughter was also really great and I appreciated that she was a character in her own right rather than just someone who was like there as a plot device so he would have something to protect or whatever. The only actual complaint I have is that we didn't get a real sex scene, but considering any sex that happened in this context would be dubcon AT BEST ...I understand why the author chose not to go that way [and it's probably for the best but I still definitely wouldn't have minded]

Also please heed the warnings that the publisher has on their website: "The Devil You Know contains some explicit content, scenes of semi-graphic torture, and off-screen, past rape." I wouldn't say that any of it is that explicit but it is there and it's all very relevant to the plot so just be aware.
Profile Image for Elaine White.
Author 43 books261 followers
September 24, 2019
Book – The Devil You Know
Author – Camilla Quinn
Star rating - ★★★★★
No. of Pages – 91
Cover – Creepy!
POV – 3rd person, multi-POV, present tense
Would I read it again – Yes!
Genre – LGBT, Assassin, Contemporary
Content Warning – memories of violence, kidnap, torture, dissociative identity disorder


** COPY RECEIVED THROUGH NETGALLEY **



This was a refreshing and original take on the whole assassin/mafia enforcer theme.

Present tense is usually not my friend, but I really liked how it was used here to provide a more intimate view of the personalities at play. The characters were both real and slightly typical of the mafia genre, well developed and explored, without any kind of info dump for back stories. I loved the father/daughter dynamics between Tom and Jessie; the chemistry between Tom/the Devil and Doro. The POV was split between all of the main characters – Tom and his split personality, the Devil; Jessie; and Doro. They all got to show their own thoughts and experiences, which really helped explore the delicate dynamics between them all. It also helped with the isolation of the location, making the story much more character and plot focused. I particularly loved the bit about using Christmas music as torture.

Overall, it was a great exploration of the genre, with originality and great characters. I'd love to read more with these characters, but I also really love the perfectly ambiguous and HFN ending.

~

Favourite Quote

“His instructors used to speak of this man, spun of flames and nightmares. They spoke of his violence, his ingenuity, his insight. He used to think they exaggerated.
As he drifts into the darkness, he realized they did not.”
Profile Image for Riina Y.T..
Author 7 books60 followers
unable-to-finish
January 10, 2018
Sadly I couldn’t connect with the main character, which made it difficult to enjoy his story. The narrative didn’t click with me, it felt too dry and impersonal to me. Also, I’m not a fan of present tense, at all :(

Since it overall didn’t work for me I didn’t finish the book, hence I won’t be rating it.

Still, I appreciate the time and love the author put into creating this book and its characters. I’m certain there are the right readers this book out there; many probably!

So, don’t let my review hold you back: give it a try! :)



Many, many thanks to the publisher who kindly provided a free copy for an honest and impartial review, even if this time I can’t really give you one.
Profile Image for Keith Chawgo.
484 reviews18 followers
February 5, 2018
The Devil you Know is an interesting story which promises a lot but delivers in a very different way.

You have a back story that is hinted at but at times the reader is never really given enough information. It is up to the reader to fill in the blank spaces and this will be the thorn in the side for some readers. Personally, I enjoyed this aspect and it gave me food for thought long after I finished the novella.
The main characters are extremely well developed with an inner monologue happening within the main character’s two distinctive personalities Tom/Devil. As the story is short on details, not sure if this is a personality coping mechanism due to the chequered past of Tom being a heartless hitman or if he suffers from a personality disorder. As his life with his daughter, Jessie does not support this, I think it is a plot device to separate the doting and loving father and the comparison with his hitman former life.

Quinn does expand on the character of Doro and as with Tom, his back story is hinted out and slowly unfolds with a storyline that is often hinted at. The situation and scenes between Tom and Doro are extremely well done and handled with a professional tenseness that the author handles expertly.

Overall, this is a story that is over before you know it and does the reader a bit cold to begin with but will start niggling within the subconscious long after finished. I felt that if the writer gave a fuller story this would be an excellent book but looking at the novella as it is, it is very well done. It does lend itself open for discussion and feel that the book delivers on many levels.
Profile Image for Shelba.
2,699 reviews101 followers
March 28, 2019
DNF @ 7%.

Third person, present tense. And quite dull at that. Not to mention that I don't like how a lot of sentences are structured. I feel like there are a lot of spots where there is a new sentence, when it could easily have just been a comma. And some spots where the opposite is true. I think for how this is written, first person might have made the narrative seem less choppy.

He pulls on jeans and a T-shirt over his long underwear. Laces up his work boots. Clips his utility knife to his belt. His gaze lingers on his nightstand and the holstered Ruger atop it. Odds of running into a snake are low, excuses to carry, paper-thin.
Profile Image for Kathryn.
971 reviews20 followers
January 5, 2018
Too still, the Devil whispers from his cage. Tom bares his teeth, shoving his fist against his thigh, but he has to agree. Loath as he is to admit it, life's been too still this past decade, since he got out of the business. Laying low always made him restless.

This was a super quick read and I loved it. It was fast-paced, intriguing, kept the reader entertained and guessing, and subtle hints of romance. I could easily see the author making this a prequel novella to a full-blown story about Tom, his daughter, and Doro on the run from The Family.

I am a huge assassin fan in stories so that is ultimately why I got this book on Amazon. I also love how the author played with the mind in this novella. That gave it a thriller aspect since Tom had Dissociative Identity Disorder and "The Devil" comes out when he can't handle things. This could easily be a movie as well. I would love to see something major come out of this story.

The father-daughter love in this story is so sweet and even when "The Devil" comes out how he treats Jessie and cares for her is so sweet and interesting. I really liked how a plot twist was thrown in here but at the right moment.

The whole story was an interesting play on the mind and power of one's mind. The subtle tension and romance was something I would love to see further explored because we only got but a small taste.

His own hand moves automatically, sliding into place and holding fast. If Tom's eyes wrinkle at the corners and his own foolish heart races, he ignores it. Maybe the man in front of him is right. Maybe it's time he makes his own choices. Here is his first. "Danek," he says slowly. "It is good to finally meet you."
Profile Image for Dannica.
839 reviews33 followers
January 2, 2018
This book is just...so good?

The Premise
Tom used to be an interrogator for "The Family", and he was a brutal sadist, partly because of a second personality he developed which he calls the Devil. Now he lives in the country with his adopted daughter Jessie, trying to stay out of trouble and keep the Devil down. Then an assassin from the family named Doro comes crashing into his life, trying to kill him for desertion. Tom manages to incapacitate him and take him captive. A game of cat-and-mouse interrogation ensues, with Tom struggling with memories of his past and Doro wondering if there's any way he can make it out of this alive.

My Thoughts
-I'm not sure whether I love Tom more as Tom or as the Devil. His split personality complements who he is when he's in control--while the Devil is certainly wilder and has done some awful things in the past, he's not entirely bad, and in some cases his looser control even allows him to be more honest and open. But whether Tom or the Devil is driving, his struggle between trying to be a good person and succumbing to the dark side (both out of sadistic urges and sheer practicality) definitely keeps you reading.

-Doro is...well, you just feel bad for him. He's an assassin and really not a good guy but he's deeply out of his league here. While Tom isn't brutal with him, he definitely pushes him slowly to his breaking point. And you really get the sense that whether it's because he spends the book basically in isolation or because of his need to stay aloof as an assassin, he's desperate for human connection and kindness. But Tom might not be the best place to be looking for that...at least at first.

-This book doesn't focus on Doro and Tom's backstories, but we do see a certain amount of what's in their past, and flashbacks always last long enough to intrigue and give insight but not long enough to delay the action in the present. Speaking of which, this is a novella at roughly 30k words, so a brisk read in general.

-I was surprised by how much I liked Jessie! Until now she hasn't seen much of Tom's dark side but she knows his past and she accepts it while not accepting that he be a monster in the present. She's wary of her current situation since there's an assassin held prisoner in her basement but keeps her head about her. She's not the center of this novel, but you can feel that she's (well, almost) the center of Tom's motivation to be better. And yet she doesn't feel like your typical flat morality pet. Idk, I just...liked her.

-So I obviously like a dark read, but I guess you should have some warnings if you're going to read this.

-Although this is technically a romance the relationship between Doro and Tom does not advance as far as you might expect, especially sexually. I was fine with that since I like dark fiction and relationship development a lot, but if you're here for assassin smut, look elsewhere.

Overall
I'm back to what I said at the beginning--I really liked it! But it's definitely dark. I would not have guessed it would be this dark from the cover.
I received an ARC through Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Nic.
982 reviews23 followers
January 23, 2018
ARC reviewed for Netgalley – MILD SPOILERS

Arghhhhh, Arghhhhh, Arghhhhhhhhhh! The length of this book…or should I say the lack there of?
Tom Burnham is a man with a mission: run from his violent, bloody past and keep his precious daughter alive and well and out of the clutches of his former employer. But that proves to be easier said than done when young and sexy assassin Doro and his bad aim show up to put Tom out of commission. The two men must decide who lives, who dies, and who does what next.

First, I loved the premise. The idea of a former assassin so heinous and heartless that he earns the nickname The Devil isn’t that unique until you discover that poor Tom actually suffers from a personality disorder, and this Devil is another personality inhabiting his mind and sometimes taking control of his body, leaving Tom fighting to once again become the man who is raising a daughter with love and devotion while simultaneously needing to be The Devil in order to find out what Doro intends to do. I just loved the idea of these two complete opposites battling for control inside the same brain. It was very fresh and well written.

But then came the crushing disappointment. Just as a crucial decision is made between Tom and Doro, these tiny letters appear: Fin. As in finished, as in The End, and in the story is over. WHAT THE WHAT???? That’s it? The action was just heating up. The decision made by the MCs was going to have some huge fallout, and I hadn’t gotten enough of the Tom/Doro show, and you’re telling me it is over. There I sat with my hot cup of tea, my snuggly penguin blanket, and what I thought would be all-night page-turner, and just like that it’s over. There is nothing on Netgalley or Goodreads to indicate that Quinn intends to continue this story, so, as of now, it seems that she gave us this great, unique plot, and then tore it out of our grasp. Not cool, not cool at all.
So, I am giving the story 5 stars and the length of the story 1 star. Yes, I can be just stingy with my stars as Quinn was with the word count. And I will just be here crying into my now cold tea and hoping that this isn’t the end for Tom and Doro. And The Devil.
Profile Image for Miekenstein .
325 reviews5 followers
December 16, 2017
I really enjoyed The Devil You Know.

I was unsure what to expect from this novella as there was a short advisory that the book contains some explicit content, scenes of semi-graphic torture, and off-screen, past rape. I honestly didn't find this book that explicit or remotely upsetting. (I'm beginning to question if my book torture meter may be broke at this point, however, due to reading too many super violent books over the years.) That said, I found the books premise very interesting and the story itself was not gross or gratuitous in its violence.

I believe very strongly in the possibility of starting over and that almost anyone can be redeemed so I went into this little book with a pretty open mind, which the reader should probably posses. Otherwise you might not enjoy a book about a former hitman and an active hitman.

I really liked Tom, our senior hitman (as in he was middle aged himself, he didn't go around killing old people). He genuinely seemed to be trying to be a better man and he kept it together the best that he could. You got to work with what you have in life, and he had a lot going on.

I also liked Doro, the younger hitman sent in to take care of Tom. He was not quite as well fleshed out to me as Tom, and I didn't always really understand his motivation in his actions, but the story did not suffer because of this.

I liked Quinn's writing style and found it tight which drew me into the book immediately. And while I can't really say what genre this book was exactly (It was not exactly suspense or romance, or even a crime drama) I enjoyed it anyway.

I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys fun stories about hitmen making friends and changing their lives for the better.

I received an ARC in exchange of an honest review.
Profile Image for Ela The Queer Bookish.
277 reviews32 followers
March 25, 2018
Actual rating: 3.5

Why isn't there more?!

I really enjoyed reading The Devil You Know. If it weren't as short, there would have been the potential of a 5 star rating. Sadly it is rather short and therefore it feels a little bit rushed at times.
I would have loved to dive even further into Tom's head, his past and his DID. I can't tell you how realistic and sensitive this is handled though because I'm not ownvoices. But I can tell you that it isn't wrongly called schizophrenia like it is so often found in media and in everyday use.
The way Tom and The Devil 'interact' (for a lack of better word right now) with each other and with other people was really captivating.

I didn't connect as strongly with Doro and Tom's daughter (I should have written down her name somewhere), but I was still interested in them. I was a little bit baffled at times about Doro's reactions about Tom but if we get a better look into his past and a in detail development between them? No more doubts on my side about this. (It would be too spoilery to tell you what exactly I mean if you haven't read this book).

I don't know why this was labelled as a romance on NetGalley though. There is the potential of one in a sequel - if there ever is one - but in The Devil You Know there is none. But maybe it would be rather a dark romance?

Please let there be a sequel? I need a sequel.



Disclaimer: I received a free copy through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you.
Profile Image for UnusualChild{beppy}.
2,565 reviews59 followers
May 16, 2018
3 stars

Synopsis: Tom used to work for a crime family as the number one assassin. Then he found his daughter and walked away from the business, living a quiet, changed life. But now someone is after him, and his daughter may be just seen as collateral damage. Tom won't let that happen without a fight, even if that means bringing who he used to be out of the closet again.
Doro has been sent to get rid of the only man who ever lived to walk away, by any means necessary. He knows that means he probably won't survive, and he is prepared for any eventuality. Even the fact that the Devil himself might make an appearance.

What I liked: how clearly each character was drawn. You could clearly see how Tom become the Devil, and why he turned away from that life. Doro's motivation and hope were also detailed, and so was Tom's daughter. For the amount of pages, there is a lot of story, but it never feels rushed or as if there is something missing from it.

What I didn't like: it was really hard to connect with Tom, and even Doro. Even though we can see Tom's humanity, his inhumanity overshadowed everything, and influenced everything that he did once Doro came in to the picture. Doro was harder to read, and his motivation harder to understand, since he never seemed to go through what Tom went through in order to become the Devil. Both of them were men without a conscience, and that lack thereof was difficult to overcome for me as a reader.

Overall impression: told in third person POV from all three characters in present tense. This was very atmospheric, and the characters were clearly drawn and well thought out. This is not a romance, as most of the story is Tom trying to figure out how to break Doro, and Doro following his orders.

*I received a copy through Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Lenni A..
Author 16 books8 followers
Read
March 19, 2018
Former mob interrogator Tom has fled his life of crime in order to live a peaceful life with his daughter. But is idyllic life is not meant to last and an assassin named Doro is sent to eliminate him.

This is a REALLY short read. We learn about Tom’s fearsome past through well-placed flashbacks and the cat and mouse between Tom and Doro is entertaining. This is a very adult book for some torture, death, and some fantasy smexy times but the real meat of the story is left up to the reader to fill in the blanks. As this is done effectively, I was left wanting to know more rather than left clueless. Not a bad read but I would have liked to see more. 3 out of 5.
Profile Image for Melanie.
386 reviews6 followers
Read
March 19, 2018
Please tell me this novella has a sequel! The reader follows the story of Tom the former assassin/interrogator with his daughter and Doro the new assassin sent to kill him. Not exciting enough for you? Oh, I forgot to mention - Tom has disassociative identity disorder, an inner (and sometimes outer) persona he refers to as the Devil.

I was surprised at how fleshed out the characters were with only about 28K words. Dreams became well-integrated flashbacks, conversations between Tom and his Devil helped flesh out his inner demons (so to speak), and Tom's daughter's presence brings a lightness to the whole story without diffusing the tension.

It's not a romance, not really, but there is a subtle hint that suggests there's something more. And that something leaves the reader wanting more.

Fair warning - there is violence, but it's not gratuitously so. That said, if depictions of violence are a problem for you, you may want to give it a pass.
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