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When Jackson Meyer hit his late teens he discovered he had the ability to travel through time…With a few restrictions:

  • When he travels his body stays in the present time.
  • When Jackson’s shadow body spends time in the past…no one will remember him, and any change he makes won’t stick when he returns to the present.
  • A trip that lasts hours in the past means only seconds of a catatonic state in present time.

Until now Jackson has been playing with time travel. He performs silly experiments days in the past with his genius BFF, Adam. It’s really all fun and games, not much of a useful ability, until the day the love of his life is shot.

Now Jackson is forced to expand his time-travel abilities, and fast. Because when he lost Holly something changed. The world of time-travelers is bigger than he thought, and those closest to him are not what they seem. In addition to being part of a global conspiracy Jackson is also stuck in the past. His senior year of high school to be specific. Holly is still very much alive, and while he’d love to change the future he can’t keep himself from dabbling in the past…

Review

I liked this book the same way I liked I Am Number Four. Once the action started I was hooked on seeing “what happens next”. Which means I spent the first half the book wading through some pretty poor writing before the mystery/action scenes distracted me from the bad dialogue.

My biggest issue was that Jackson didn’t sound like a teenage boy. I think it’s why he’s so hard to connect with. There’s no reality in his thoughts or actions. They really do sound like a woman attempting to talk/think like a young man. And it’s really not working. And when the main protagonist of the story doesn’t ring true…it’s hard to accept the world building in the rest of the plot.

The main female lead, Holly, is better conceived. Her dialogue seems realistic, as do her choices during the plot. But Holly obviously goes through a major change in the few years between High School Holly and College Holly because they’re practically two different people. And while I like to think that as I age I mature and change as well. I’ve never switched from spunky and outgoing to reserved in a matter of two years. Not without a major life changing event. Though, Cross could be building up to that in her future installments.

For me, the only though provoking statement in, almost, the whole book is when Adam questions why Jackson thinks he’s even in love with Holly. When Adam says it I thought “Finally, someone is going to mention the elephant in this room book.” This statement alone pauses our hero and causes him to redefine his relationship with her…look below the surface. I like that he took this criticism to heart. It was one of the best things Jackson did in the whole book. Because before he was so unconnected to his feelings. Very wooden in his actions. The character was claiming to feel things I didn’t really feel as a reader. Adam’s protective query redeemed, slightly, Cross’s writing. It made me think she might actually have a plan for this whole shebang.

Ultimately, what bothers me most is I don’t know why this is even a book. Most reviews say that this book would be better as a movie. Why not just write the movie?  Is it the desire for sales across both genres? Was the book just a foot in the door for a movie deal? This is just another case of a decent idea gone unfulfilled. Had Cross spent more time in the writing phase of her book we’d end up with better characters and a more substantial plot this could be an interesting tale. As it stands it just left me with a cliffhanger that will force me to read the next book…or just watch the movie…

Rating: 2/5 Wait for the silver screen. The plot will be enhanced with visuals and access to popcorn…

*Book received for review from The Midnight Garden Book Tours via St. Martin’s Griffin ARC, Thanks!*

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So…my work life has become VERY busy…and reading Waterfall by Wednesday didn’t work out so well. Thus I give you TheLibrarian’s:

Waterfall Wednesdays Friday-A Read-a-Along Event

(Because we all know how much I love me a Read-a-long 😉 )

Discussion 1: Chapters 1-6

Today’s questions hosted by Tinasbookreviews

Without Further Ado…My Answers

1. Waterfall opens with the introduction of Gabi, shes depressed, a little angry and is dealing with feelings of loneliness. Are you connecting with her this soon in the novel? Do you see things you like or dislike?

I think I began connecting with Gabi once she went back in time. Before that she seemed a little underdeveloped. I really got a feel for her humor and adventurous personality once she hit the 14th century. Though, I understand her feelings in present day Italy (personally I’d be thrilled to spend an entire summer in Tuscany! but I’m not a teen, lol) but I don’t think there was enough time to really connect to present day Gabi in the present.

2. Gabi gets to time travel back to 14th Century Italy- The Dark Ages in its prime. Is there anytime in history that fascinates you and would you travel back if you could?

I’m heading for the renaissance. Just a little past Gabi’s time period. To be in Florence during it’s prime…ahh, heaven! All the art, the food, the society, the clothing. Just to be a part of all those new ideas being thrown around, very cool!

3. Most of the men, including Marcello have a very set opinion about a woman’s place. Gabi gets manhandled a bit in these first few chapters, and even gets asked if she’s a witch. The men are shocked when Gabi rides a horse like a man and shimmies down the castle walls. What do you think of mens mentality back then? Gentlemanly, chauvinistic, simple-minded?

Probably a combination of Gentlemanly and chauvinistic. But I think we sometimes forget that all of society thought would have gone toward convincing men and women of their place. Women probably got more respect than we give the time credit for. But I don’t think women would have been as insulted by the slights as we are from our perspective today. Most of us would have reacted like Lady Rossi – shock and horror at the idea a woman would ride out into battle. Sad but probably true.

4. When Gabi becomes a part of this era, the people are immediately intrigued but suspicious of her. Many judge her by her difference. Do you think this is fair? Have you ever been in a situation where you felt like an outsider or that others were misjudging you?

I think we all judge others by our own personal standards of life. What else do we have to measure thing by? And you have to admit the phrases she uses, showing up in jeans and a tank, heck – even being 6 inches taller than most tall women…She’d look like a freak to us as well! I think that it’s harder to take judgement when you’re only slightly different from those you’re being judged by. Gabi may be uncomfortable or sad for many reasons in 14th century Italy, but I bet feeling different is pretty low on that list of reasons.

5. What do think the coolest thing would be about living in the Dark Ages? What would be the worst?

The Good:

1. The hot men (if I showed up in Gabi’s world, lol)

2. The beautiful clothing

3. seeing a castle in full working order

The Bad:

1. Bad hygiene

2. The food…one can only eat so much bread and cheese

3. The lack of medical knowledge…talk about becoming a germaphobe!

Link up your answers with Tina and check out Misse at The Unread Reader for next weeks discussion questions.

Winner of the Trilogy for this week will be posted at next weeks discussion!

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