His life littered with the women he's used--including a dead hooker he'd planned on marrying--Chip Davis is ready to move on. A blue eyed teenage wonder has found her way into his life, and he intends to run with her at full speed towards happiness. He knows she's the one, and nothing is going to keep him from holding onto her; not a dead friend, a missing brother, a kidnapped son, or a father whose sudden choice to explore the darker side of his employment will turn him away. Nothing except for his own demons, and, perhaps, the truth.
Charybdis, the well received first novel of writer K.A. Thompson, is the first book in the Charybdis Novels series, which includes As Simple As That and critically acclaimed Finding Father Rabbit.
I'm currently living in mega-metropolis Dixon, CA (population 17,000) with a Spouse Thingy and two cats (Max the Psychokitty and Buddah Pest, both of whom are far more popular than I...and Max has his own books out there...) I also have an adult son who long ago escaped the confines of parental ineptitude and is pursuing his love of acting. The kid is seriously good--Srsly--so keep an eye out for Curt Thompson.
FAQ: In what order should your books be read?
1. Charybdis 2. As Simple as That 3. Finding Father Rabbit 4. The King and Queen of Perfect Normal 5. (Coming soon) The Flipside of Doubt
It's Not About the Cookies is a stand-alone novel...and the one my mother hates.
And yes, my cat Max has 3 books in the market. The Psychokitty Speaks Out: Diary of a Mad Housecat, The Psychokitty Speaks Out: Something of Yours Will Meet a Toothy Death and The Rules: A Guide for People Owned by Cats.
I have to say this book seemed bizarrely schizophrenic to me. It was partly a family saga sort of book but then had an incredibly weak spy plot mixed into it. The two things never meshed at all.
The main character seemed off to me from the start. He is 21 years old but speaks and acts like a man in his 40's. I never cared at all about any of the characters and the ending
Disappointing. This wavered between 1 and 2 stars (mostly 2 stars) throughout. The weak ending sealed it as a 1 star book. The story was hard to buy and the main character was never made believable, which should be done by a good writer regardless of whether the reader likes the character or not.
I would have probably given it 4.5 stars. The book has an interesting story with great characters. Although there are some errors in the writing it was still a good read, i will definatly read the 2nd book in this series.