The Hook 2016 Reading Plan – A book from my shelves
The Line "While it's true that Fourth of July was the last time Bobby Carlson ever did the fireworks, everyone had to agree it was also the most memorable."
The Sinker – How the hey did Fireworks get on my bookshelves and why didn’t I cull it when I did my last purge? I honestly don’t remember where I picked this book up but believe it was the promise of fireworks that intrigued me. I am addicted to fireworks, loving the pure pageantry, the color, the flash, the boom, the brighter, the bigger, the better. I’ll go miles and wit hours to see fireworks not only on the Fourth of July but also for other displays throughout the year. So I think the title is why I grabbed the book.
Fireworks is really not my kind of story. This does not make it a bad book, just not one that is high up on my best list. I did finish it even though fireworks played only a small part in the whole. Though the overall story of an alien ship ditching in small town Collier, Georgia resulting in a conspiracy theory plot by the US government did not wow me I have to honestly say I grew attached to the characters, particularly the Chief, the Captain, whatever you want to call him, Frank Osborne. He’s an old fashioned, no nonsense kind of guy who takes his job seriously and considers the citizens of Collier, good or bad, his responsibility.
The author, James A. Moore, gives a nod to the genius of Stephen King and Dean Koontz, both authors I read and like, as inspiration for his tale. Yep, this is a horror story, Moore’s second, written in 2001. Since, he has written many more in the horror, fantasy genre. The tone of his books suggests gritty, gruesome, creepy plots. This one not so much; it is more character than plot driven, I think and really not very scary. Bentley Little, another horror writer says of Moore
Here is a talent. Here is someone to watch.”
Well, I couldn’t really speak to that but I enjoyed watching the fireworks for certain.