Creston Mapes
Author of Fear Has a Name
Series
Works by Creston Mapes
I Pick You: A High-Voltage Contemporary Christian Fiction Thriller (Signs of Life Series Book 3) (2020) 4 copies
The Crittendon Files (3 Book Series) 3 copies
The Crittendon Files: Haunting Contemporary Suspense, Books 1-3 (The Crittendon Files Boxset Series) (2019) 2 copies
Secrets in Shadows: A Riveting Christian Thriller Police Procedural (Signs of Life Series Book 6) 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
Members
Reviews
Awards
You May Also Like
Statistics
- Works
- 24
- Members
- 630
- Popularity
- #39,984
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 34
- ISBNs
- 44
I wasn't entirely sure what the core of this story would be—a psychological dive into the mind of a mass killer, a look at the aftermath of his victims? I didn't really see how it could be an action-packed race to stop a terrible event from happening, considering that the synopsis makes it clear the mass shooting has already happened. In the end, though, there was some of that as well as the look at the aftermath of the victims, in the form of more than one person who lost someone that day. I can't really say there was much psychology on the killer's side shown, which is not a problem, partly because it would have made the book much darker than I would prefer and also because it's not really said to be about that. The story starts out pretty slowly and continues that way for more than half of the book. Then suddenly, it's super tense and hurtling toward a major climax. The pacing could have been better, but I'll admit that I was pretty caught up in the book in the last third.
A lot of my problems came in small bits and pieces here and there. I didn't have any issues with the writing style (other than the aforementioned pacing), though there were several places that I'm certain a proofreader should have caught an extra comma here or there, or one spot where a couple of sentences at the beginning of a chapter were literally repeated at the beginning of another, 2 chapters later (this book was self-published, fyi). But for example, why, in a book set in pretty modern times especially, did the author choose to have one of the characters make the distinction that his son's girlfriend was black (but he and his wife have decided they're are okay with it) and that he worried what family and friends might think? Why was there such a large focus on violent video games as the catalyst for the shooter's rampage, when literally a quick search online shows that there really isn't any correlation (maybe unless the perpetrator is already mentally unstable). I have a few other examples that I marked in my notes, but I don't want to unbalance the review.
The Christian angle in this book is overall pretty good. Cooper and his late wife were Christians, but he has decided that God is not what He claims to be in the Bible, if he could let such a wonderful woman as his wife die (actually, I think he's in danger of putting her on a pedestal, unless she really is as perfect as his reminiscences would have us believe). Deetz is an unbeliever but is introduced to Christianity by his son, who attends what sounds like a mega-church. Two different starting points lead to some interesting conversations about God. In the end, I wish I had liked this book more, but I didn't dislike it either. It's clear that plenty of fans of the genre liked it more than I did, so if you're interested, definitely check it out. I have another Creston Mapes book on my shelf, given to me by a friend, so I'll be interested to read another book by this author.… (more)