Sunday, 10 July 2011

Week 29: Ex Machina, by Robert Finn - Book 34

Some time ago, I read a book called Adept, by Robert Finn and I thought it was fabulous. A little bit of adventure, thriller and a sprinkling of fantasy thrown in for good measure. I knew there as a sequel, but hadn't been able to find it in my local library or in the second hand bookshops and had half forgotten about it until I came across it on my Kindle and immediately downloaded it. The book is called Ex Machina and I started to read it with great anticipation. However, I was a bit perplexed for quite a while as the main characters from the first book - Susan Milton and David Braun - seemed to be absent and we were being told a tale by a new, and, quite frankly, very irritating narrator called Jo Hallett who got right on my nerves from the get go. The book seemed to take an age to get going and didn't have the pace and verve of it's predecessor.  Eventually, Susan and David did appear but they took quite a back seat to the action which I found very frustrating. In a nutshell, both books are about a secret army of people who have magical powers - but only when they are wearing gold. They also have longevity, but that is dependent upon "The Marker" without which their time on this earth is limited. The book focuses on the hunt for the Marker - the good guys trying to prevent the bad guys from grabbing it to wreak havoc on an unsuspecting world for a long, long time to come. It's all about the power (isn't everything). Into this comes Jo, an unhappy and ever so slightly unstable girl who is too clever for her own good and has very few social graces - but without her, all may be lost!. Her journey to redemption is a bumpy one, and a bit on the long side for my liking. I am sad to say I was disappointed by this book. Whereas the first had thrills and spills and likeable characters - this sequel, which relegates them to bit players, was an odd choice to make by the author in my view. Hey ho!

My star rating: THREE.

The stats bit:
Length: 416 print pages.
Price I paid: £4.31 (Kindle)
Other formats available: print.

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