Why? Because I more clearly see what it is about Clines’ work that pulls me in so quickly and keeps me reading long after my bedtime. Looking back after having read 14, I like it better. And I really liked the hero aspect, but at the time of reading, I didn’t love the book. Not as much as Clines’ other stuff, but it had all the good parts-relatable characters and deep story lines. I bought it, listened to it and quite liked it. It looked like a horror novel and I don’t really read horror.Įx-Heroes was an Audible Daily Deal. Although the cover had first caught my attention, it also sort of put me off. 14 continued to languish on my TBR bookcase, largely ignored. Snapped it up, read it, loved it, reviewed it. They fairly leapt off the page and though the stories were short, there was an incredible depth to them, as if I was reading about people I knew, or had known.Įarlier this year I was offered a copy of The Fold to read for review. I’d liked Clines’ take on zombies and had enjoyed his characters. I found a copy at the library sale a couple of years ago, shortly after I read The Junkie Quatrain. Mysteries of the ages! Apocalypses! Steampunk doomsday devices! Tentacles!ġ4 is definitely my favourite of Peter Clines’s books-and I almost didn’t read it.
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