Rating: Summary: My first Tami Hoag book Review: This was my first Hoag novel, and let me tell you I was not dissapointed in the least. I saw the TV movie after I read this book too, and as usual, the movie didn't do the novel justice. I recently read Guilty as Sin (the sequal to Night Sins) and it was also very good. I've read almost all of her books now, and keep waiting for the new ones to arrive.
Rating: Summary: Same old formula Review: I picked up this book after reading and loving Hoag's Ashes to Ashes and Still Waters. I have not finished it however, because I actually groaned out loud at the "female heroine who is investigating the crime who gets involved with the man who is bad for her" theme. It is exactly the same in these 3 books. Maybe I can tolerate finishing it after a few months when I forget how much this book is like the other ones. Other than that problem, I have found her books to be most enjoyable. Let's just come up with some new characters, please!!
Rating: Summary: Kept Me Turning Pages Review: This book was very entertaining to read. I became completely involved in the characters and the need to find out what happened to Josh. The ending was quite unexpected and now I'm hooked on Tami Hoag and anxious to read more of her books.
Rating: Summary: first time Hoag reader... Review: I went into this book, knowing that there would be a part 2 book. I picked up the book because I've heard Tami Hoag is a good writer. I'm into suspense (among other subjects for reading) and knowing that this took place in Minnesota (she is basically a Minnesota based writer), I was even more opened to reading the book (I was born and raised in Minn.).A story about Josh being kidnapped in a small rural town in Minnesota. Being taken outside a skating rink, on a January evening, without the sign of anyone, anywhere. The sick and twisted person (or perhaps persons) who took him is now playing a sick game. A sick tail chasing game for the crime agencies and the town of Deer Lake itself to play...to guess. Who done it? Who could have done it? Who had that twisted ideal in them in Deer Lake, Minnesota? Who had something against eight year old Josh? Or Hannah (Josh's mother who was the head doctor in the ER at the hospital...very respected by the community)? or Paul Kirkwood? (Josh's father, who is an accountant...who was secondary in the head of the household...moreorless, always known as Dr. Hannah Garrison's husband). Reading the book, kept me guessing. I had some ideals (which was correct so far...on to "Guilty As Sin" though). As you read, there were no real concrete answers in the book, as there was no real concrete reason for one to play this game. I definitely say read the book, and have Guilty As Sin on hand because this book won't leave you with all of the answers...Night Sins isn't meant to be clean, cut and dried. So don't expect it reading only Night Sins!!
Rating: Summary: A suspense mystery worth reading Review: Night Sins offers a decent twisting plot will good characters and a well planned ending. Held my attention throughout and was not overly predictable. Definitley worth reading.
Rating: Summary: Good Read Review: I haven't read many Tami Hoag books previously, but am looking forward to reading Guilty as Sin to find out what transpires. A good way to make people buy more books is to leave you hanging for a sequal. This book makes you see how things often work in real life. A lot of times, there aren't all the answers. Sometimes, you never find out what really happened and you never know how someone could do such a monstrous thing. The book made me really feel the pain that many of the characters felt. The mother's emotional as well as Megan's physical pain. That's what makes this a good read. Although some of the writing was somewhat long-winded, I still couldn't put it down.
Rating: Summary: HOAG ROCKS! Review: Tami Hoag, author of such bestsellers "Ashes to Ashes" and "Dust to Dust", knows how to write a book! Though "Night Sins" is an earlier book than the other two mentioned, it still displays her considerable talents as a storyteller, weaving intense emotional backdrops which she sets her dramatic thrillers against. Creating fully believable events that affect her credibly drawn cast of characters, Hoag delivers thrillers that continue to amaze by covering new territory on each outing, and bringing to life the people of the frozen north...Minnesota to be exact. Setting most of her stories in such a forbidding meteorological place, bringing out in bas relief the events that transpire, giving each story a moody and tense atmosphere. I was hooked after reading only one of Hoag's finely written thrillers...and now I can't seem to stop reading them!
Rating: Summary: Great! Review: Make sure you have "Guilty as Sin" on hand to start as soon as you finish this one, it is the sequel to this one and is equally as good. I just happened across a copy of "Still Waters" a couple of weeks and read it without having read any Tami Hoag stuff before. I liked it so much that I immediately ordered both "Night Sins" and "Guilty as Sin" and read them back to back. Both are pretty long and I breezed through them in about 4 days - they were that good. I am a big fan of Patricia Cornwell and James Patterson and since I am caught up on their stuff I am now going to order a few more of Tami Hoag's books. She writes a good combination of love story and mystery, a little bit of a change from Cornwell and Patterson, but a good change in my opinion.
Rating: Summary: Night Sins Captures Attention and Sends Thoughts Spinning Review: Upon beginning the book "Night Sins" by Tami Hoag, I was unsure if it would be able to retain my attention through the end of the book. I was completely and utterly shocked when I couldn't put the book down! The heartwrenching story of a kinapping in a small Minnesotan town really hits home to the realities of the dark world. Hoag does an excellent job of portraying the many emotions and stresses that a grief stricken family, a corrupted police force, and a psychopathic mind all experience. Combine the angst of a kidnapping with an unexpected romance, and you have a thriller that keeps you on the edge of your seat. I reccomend Night Sins as a book that pushes you to the edge of the cliff, only to let you hang there in suspense.
Rating: Summary: Predictable, forced, and annoying Review: This is the most difficult read I've tried in years. Maybe Harlequin fans could enjoy the forced situations, predictable characters, and endless mindless horniness of this book. Please put Fabio on the cover to steer people who like plots and sensible stories away. Someone told me that if I liked Grafton and Cornwell and Fairstein that I'd love Hoag. No way, Hoag is a romance writer - not a story teller. Frequently the story takes mindless turns, leaving the reader confused. The confusion clears when you realize the device was set to get a couple of principals into coupling position. Hoag has an original idea here. If characters are plain, or old, or physically flawed they are bad. If they are young and physically attractive they are good. Very clever. I identified the first of the bad guys when he was introduced. The character's existence made no sense, what he had to offer made no sense, and he was very homely. Although introduced as a caring person I guessed he just had to be a baddy with those looks, he was. The main male character is introduced "bulge" first in an incredibly contrived scene, your typical police chief in tights. Within a few chapters our agent lady finds herself "melting against him, on fire." Need I say Give Me A Break? Better yet, give me Kinsey Millhone.
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