June, 2020
4.5 stars
Liked it even better on the second read. YAY!
Collide is a book that raised questions about its story, a book with a twist, and answers given at the end. I was quite puzzled the first time I read it. This time was different. Better.
Already knowing the twist, knowing the answers, I was able to just let myself be immersed in the story, so much so I felt Emm's dizziness, saw what she described through fog she saw, almost feel the wind she felt. It's been a while since I was that drawn in a story.
Knowing the answers, I was able to enjoy it without questioning it, have fun with picking up clues for the twist to come, that I'd missed the first time around, and get to know the characters all over again.
Emmaline I remembered quite well, of course. This time I made sure to focus on Johnny too. Both Johnny-now, and Johnny-then.
During my first read, Johnny Dellasandro was an enigma that Emm obsessed over. Afterwards, he was a pretty face and a hot body. This time I gave my full attention to him, and I have to admit, I was quite smitten with him, both with his young and older self.
I'm still not gonna go into the paranormal aspect of the story. That's just a headache waiting to happen. When it comes to paranormal romance, I choose to focus on the romance.
This romance developed in different times, decades apart. Past and present, in a complicated timeline. The important part is it developed, and I enjoyed reading it twice.
June, 2017
4 stars
Nothing scarier than getting to the last third of Megan Hart's book, and reading that the main characters are just fine.
As I've already said a thousand times, I am a huge Megan Hart fan. For good reason. With her books, it's not a question whether or not I'll like the book, but how much I'll like it. Collide is one of those I really liked.
This is Emmaline's story. Emm is a new resident in Harrisburg, a familiar place in Hart's novels. A lot of her fictional characters live there and cross paths with whoever it is I'm reading about at the time. I love those cameos, but back to Emm. When she was a child she suffered an accident which left her vulnerable to fugue states. In reality she'd black out while in her mind she was experiencing something else. At almost thirty-two, after being free from fugue states for a longer time, she's finally living independently. New town, new job, new friend, and then a new crush: Johnny Dellasandro.
Johnny is an artist and an art gallery owner who likes to keep to himself, but in the seventies he was a famous movie star with a famous body often on display in his films. Jen, Emm's friend, is already a fan who knows a lot about him. Emm becomes one soon afterwards. She's attracted to and intrigued by him. Her internet searches become more Johnny-oriented, as do her film choices. She became a bit obsessed by him, I'd say. Well, more than a bit, actually. I found it a little odd, her sudden intense interest in him. But, I went along with it in the hopes it would all make sense after a while.
Crossing paths with Johnny has another effect on Emm -- her fugues return, and this time in all of them he's there. The young Johnny with whom Emm is more free, more brave, and who is more into Emm than the present Johnny seems to be. Though she has more luck with the dream Johnny than the real one, she wasn't giving up until she wore him down, so to speak. At that time, I still had my doubts about this couple. They were one big question mark. There was just something not quite clear.
All my questions flew out of my head when I was two thirds into the book, and Emm said everything was fine. It was a terrifying sentence. This is Megan Hart we're talking about: creator of worlds, destroyer of worlds. Up until that point I took my time reading Collide, but that sentence freaked me out so much that I read and I read until I got to the end. Sure, it was five o'clock in the morning when I finished reading it, but at least I was able to sleep in peace afterwards. That was the part where it all clicked into place. Everything that didn't make a lot of sense, everything I found weird, I saw in a new light, and I understood.
This is one of Megan Hart's paranormal romances. Truth be told, the romance was a lot more important to me than the paranormal aspect of the story. I didn't want to overthink the paranormal stuff. You could say I adopted the heroine's take on what was happening: None of this made sense, yet it made perfect sense. All I had to do was suspend my disbelief. So I did, because in the end I all cared about was that Emm and Johnny got an ending belonging in a romance novel.