Genre:
Fiction
Pages: Paper
Back
Publisher:
Young Lions At The Gate
Reviewer:
Virginia Armstrong
JAGS: 5
The Woman on Pritchard Street, a pseudo werewolf political thriller, tells the story of
Simon Gautreaux, a journalist by trade, as he goes on a quest to the find the
hidden truth in an all-consuming web of darkness. Hired as a private investigator by a nameless
benefactor, Simon travels to his hometown in Georgia, only to find the woman he
is investigating is his long lost love, Grace, who is in dire need of his
help.
Slaying
demons from Hell, Simon brings Grace back to D.C. with him only to learn his
benefactor is responsible for all the brutal attacks occurring in Georgia and
D.C. Further probing unveils dark
secrets concerning key players throughout D.C. as well as across the globe-secrets
that even he is not immune to. With the puzzle unraveling, Simon soon realizes
his own life has a hidden past.
Traveling to Budapest to seek out answers, he reunites with his powerful
grandparents, who bestow upon him all that he needs to wage war back in D.C.
As for
heroic attributes, Simon drank a little too much, had a raging temper and made
one too many derisive comments. He also
pigeonholed all the folk in his hometown as uneducated, dirty and apathetic. The
emotions portrayed were lax concerning the slayings and Grace’s death, but the
kicker was when Simon set loose his dog on another character. The time spent in
Budapest had the reader perking up, but the story crashed again on return to
D.C.
The Woman on Pritchard Street has a good story line and gives the reader a few unexpected
laughs, but lacks a certain depth. As Simon states, everything fall into his
lap a little too easily. With that said, it seemed the author is allowed less
effort into the telling of the story.
A definite
summer read for those pool side days!
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