Rating: Summary: I love Alex Cross Review: I like this character the only problem I have is that I have read the novels out of sequence. I am enjoying this book and I must say it has been come a fast read for me... which is great. I have to go back, because I was wondering when Alex had "little Alex"..... Good so far...
Rating: Summary: Alex Cross Formula works again Review: Alex Cross is back. He meets beautiful women, spars verbally and mentally with master criminal/homicidal maniacs and chases down some of hte most violent murderers in the vampire killers. I like the series. I got what I expected: short chapters, fast paced action and good versus evil, but I have to wonder if the formula is not getting a bit ragged with time.
Rating: Summary: A really great story Review: The "vampire" slayings make for a clever police procedural that takes the audience on a unique tour of the Bay area as well as other areas of the country. The Mastermind subplot seems to interfere with the other tale though it enables the audience to observe a depressed and panicked Alex using work to escape his plight. In his latest Cross thriller, VIOLETS ARE BLUE, James Patterson keenly blends his hero's personal and professional lives as each aspect clash leaving the audience with another complete tale. A novel I also have read recently and like very much is Paul Omeziri's Descent into Illusions. Both deal eloquently with dark and mysterious themes.
Rating: Summary: A Prisoner Review: It is surprising to me that what has happened to James Patterson doesn't happen to more very good writers who attain fame and fortune. Unfortunately, he has become a prisoner to the style that made him so big: the quick chapters, the short, pained thought-bytes of Alex Cross, and the ubiquitous Nana. But for him it has gone even further, and his writing has become a caricature of his former style. While other top writers like Grisham and Michael Connelly have flirted with this type of complacency, they have come roaring back as soon as they have become aware of it. Patterson, unfortunately, has not, and is sinking fast.
Rating: Summary: Alex Cross Has Gone Over the Top Review: Don't get me wrong. I'm as big a fan of Alex Cross as anyone, but after reading "Violets are Blue," I think that James Patterson has taken this character beyond believable. Really, how much torture can an author inflict on a character in novel after novel, and still make that character realistic to the reader? First of all Alex is constantly being stalked by the current homicidal maniac. Madmen make threatening phone calls at all hours of the day, and invade his house in the middle of the night. He can't have any kind of a relationship with a woman, because the psycho stalking him will either terrorize or kill her. His kids will probably have emotional issues all their lives because they're forever being guarded or moved to a safe house away from the killer/stalker/vampire, etc. Please Mr. Patterson, don't you think Alex has had enough? Have him take an early retirement, and move him and his family to a remote location where no one can ever find him. Maybe your next action hero could be Alex's best friend, John Sampson; but whatever you do, please let Alex Cross finally rest in peace!
Rating: Summary: Trite and pedestrian Review: ...After being thoroughly disappointed by the last two novels by Patterson that I picked up--his Murder Club series--I figured I'd give him another chance with the latest Alex Cross story, Violets Are Blue. ...Violets are Blue is just plain deplorable. The sentence structure reads like something out of a "See Spot Run" book and the storytelling isn't much better. Supposedly, Cross has been pursued by some person called the Mastermind... However, the secret to the identity of the Mastermind is so obvious from the first 10 pages of the book that it's not really any fun to keep on reading and find out if your suspicions are confirmed or not. As for the rest of the story--involving Cross investigating a series of murders based around a vampire cult and maybe falling in love with his co-worker...well, it's pretty much yawn inducing the entire way around. ...
Rating: Summary: Disappointing Review: I've read most of the Alex Cross series and each one has gotten worse and worse. This one starts out with a bang and is a real page-turner for the first half of the book, but peters out with a disappointing middle and abrupt ending. Very unsatisfying This is one of the few mysteries where I guessed the culprit which took a lot of the fun out of the book. It was an obvious choice but didn't really make sense. It's clear James Patterson doesn't think much of his readers. This is the last James Patterson book for me.
Rating: Summary: Disappointed Review: I enjoy murder mysteries but all the way through this book the excessive killing was at no time matched by smart detective work. All Alex did was fly around from city to city. It was so obvious who the villains were that nothing was left to hold the suspense. I've read several of James Patterson's books and was so looking forward to reading this. I was extremely disappointed.
Rating: Summary: Drivel Review: A dreadful book, written for the intellectual level of fans of Nancy Drew, but without any style. The big mystery about this book is how the author could manage to get it published. You would be better off reading the telephone book. I gave it one star only because I was unable to give it any stars...
Rating: Summary: Another one bites the dust Review: As I've said in my other Alex Cross series reviews, this thing is played out and I'm tiring of Patterson's half-assed attention to this series. Although I must say, that this book was far more interesting than the previous two in the series; Pop Goes the Weasel, followed by Roses are Red. I'm sure I'll read the next installment, Four Blind Mice, but I've got low expectations for it and I won't be reading it until my library has it. I'd suggest you do the same, borrow any books from this series as they're really not something you'll read several times and aren't worth the money. I think Patterson has long rode out the good reputation of this series, and it's gone sour. The "mastermind" has been a weak villain (and I thought the weasel was bad) that was basically strung along for the entire novel, and really played no part at all (sort of like the fate of a certain character in "Pop Goes the Weasel", who ended up being thrown even further on the back burner for these two novels) and the ending of this book felt rushed and really fell flat, not near as exhilerating as it should have been, considering I had to read through two books to get to it. The series is starting to read like a really bad soap opera. I can't imagine starting out in the series anywhere prior to Roses are Red and wanting to read any of the rest of the series. If you like this book, you'll LOVE the rest of the series, you'll have to, because as of this point in the series, it's damn near hit rock bottom.
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