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"Instinct's not a superpower. It's made of experience and memory and belief."Alex Traynor was a famous photojournalist known for capturing pictures of some of the world's most brutal and haunting scenes of conflict and unrest. But after he was kidnapped, he began suffering from PTSD and turned to drugs to help quell the visions he seemed to see whether his eyes were open or closed.At the end of his rope and high on drugs, he decided to kill himself. Yet at the end of the night, Cori Stanton—his
This was my Kindle first reads pick. It didn’t really grab me, probably partially because I didn’t have a lot of respect for any of the characters. I could see no logical reason for the actions of Emily and Alex, nor why they were even together.
I’m not sure how this book has received so many great reviews. Have reader expectations really sunk so low that this barely average book has become a five-star novel?Don’t get me wrong, the writing was grammatically correct (which should never be a selling point but in this day and age it is), and the overall concept of the storyline was fine, but the execution was average at best. I’ll be nice and start off with the positives:I continued to turn pages until the end. There was enough of a story
‘The way Sheryn Sterling was feeling, it might not have been the best idea to put a knife in her hand.’Sheryn Sterling has a new working partner and an old grudge. The partner is Rafael Mendoza, the grudge Alex Traynor.Traynor is a photojournalist who is doing his best to cope with life on the civilian streets of New York. His previous work in a number of war zones has left him scarred. He’s suffering from PTSD and has struggled on and off with self-medication. Sterling’s beef with him is that s...