I’ll begin by saying I was - still am - a big fan of “My Lovely Wife”.
Samantha Downing raised the bar with psychological thrillers with her outstanding debut.
I’m still enthralled with Samantha’s talents, in “He Started It”.... and plan to keep reading her books as long as she keeps writing them.
However....where “My Lovely Wife” rocked my page-turning world ....from its fabulous beginning and fabulous ending....
“He Started It”....( started out exciting), eventually wore me down. I felt the book lost its edge for the entire last thirty percent, becoming first tedious, then boring, then finally ridiculously silly.
I felt much like one of the characters in the book when Eddie said....
“Nothing is here—no marching band, no welcome banner, nothing to mark our arrival”.
You’ll meet the Morgan Siblings > Beth, Eddie, and Portia. While on a car trip together. Beth brings her husband, Felix. Eddie brings his wife, Krista. Portia is not married.
These adult siblings ( and the two spouses), don’t want to be together.
They have no interest in spending hours upon hours together for fourteen days sleeping in crappy motels and eating crappy foods in diners or from gas station food stores...visiting museums and attractions they don’t want to visit (again), but in order to collect a beefy inheritance from their deceased Grandpa.....that’s the deal.
Grandpa took the siblings on this same car trip when they were kids.
The premises had great potential- but it couldn’t sustain the magic. There was too much dangly pendulous suspicion—vacillating a little too much between visiting museums & attractions in different states, the mystery of Grandpa’s conditions to receive their money bundle, the cars that followed, ( both trips), the mystery of a forth sibling, ‘Nikki’, and a travelogue journey.
Character development, ( rather the lack of mature adult development), and interactive-dialogue between the characters was fun, fresh, and sassy. It was always easy to dislike at least one of the characters at any given moment.
There were enough lies, secrets, jealousy, selfishness, manipulation, patronizing, opposition, abuse, sick games, betrayals, and violence, to create a bomb explosion.
Beth... middle sibling, was a great narrator telling this story. Her devious inner thoughts and scheme plotting was a kick.
Her voice and inner voice was one of the books strength.
I enjoyed visiting some of the tour-attractions—but not all. That part was just personal taste - I had no interest in the UFO’s....but I did have interest in The Helen Keller House, The Bonnie and Clyde Ambush, The Henry Humphrey memorial, and The Codger Pole ( cedar logs with the head of the Golden players carved into them)....
But the plot and subplots - storytelling itself - began to have a monotone feeling ( around 70%), rather than an elevated momentum of excitement.
Lots of sibling bickering, between the strategizing-RISK- ( yep, board game), playing family.....antibacterial wipes for those motel room, unreliable memories, a night of camping in the woods, Fried bologna sandwiches, booze, cigarettes, candy stealing and other thievery, (yep, it’s great to have a kleptomaniac for one of the characters), even an Etch-a-Sketch made its way into this story.
So....yes..this book was mostly fun...glad I read it ....enjoyed more than 50% very much....
I would have loved to have been able to view other ending possibilities....
However... I still like Samantha Downing’s creative thought process.....and spunky writing.....
I admit being glad when that last section of this book was over - more than ending with a ‘wow’ feeling....
I still believe Samantha raises the bar on the psychological thriller genres.
3.7ish ....rating up to 4 stars.