Green Eye is the final installment of The Thorn Trilogy. I loved the first book in the series for its sinister atmosphere and suspense and gave it 4 stars. I enjoyed the second book because there was just something about the protagonist, Rosa Thorn, that clicked with me, and then I worked my way through this final offering, and I'm still shaking my head. What ever happened?
The plot takes place in Cambridge this time where Rosa's son, Danny, is now a student. It's the final week of the semester, Danny is appearing in a student theatre production of Othello and Rosa heads up there for a visit. Kind of clever, because Othello reflected the themes of jealousy, love, betrayal, racism, revenge and repentance that were playing out in the 'real' lives of the characters.
Oh, and there's a rapist walking about in Cambridge, but that seemed to be a minor point.
The structure of the book follows exactly the same pattern as the two previous ones. There are frequent changes in perspectives going from third-person to first-person when it's Rosa's perspective. Nothing much happens until 70% into the story. I was used to all that from the first two books, so that was fine.
However, Rosa Thorn has taken on the role of an insignificant subsidiary character in her own trilogy. She may just as well have been omitted completely and it wouldn't have made much difference to the plot.
Instead, there are copious characters all connected to the academic or theatrical setting, and each single one of them was exaggerated so much, I started wondering whether I was reading a satirical farce.
In the first two books, I was left wondering who the culprit was right to the end, but here, everything was so blatantly obvious that there was no suspense left. The only thing I failed to work out was the genetic connection between some of the characters.
The only positive thing I have, the title is quite clever, as one of the themes is jealousy and the girl with the "hypnotic" green eyes plays the most significant role in the entire plot.
It's almost painful because I really enjoyed the other two books so much, but I seriously can't rate this any higher than 2.5 stars.
I received a copy via NetGalley in exchange for an unbiased review.