Ratings13
Average rating3.3
Working with Homicide Detective Isabella Cherabino to put killers behind bars, an interrogator with the ability to get inside the twisted minds of suspects must stop a serial killer stalking the city while trying to kick his drug habit. Original.
Series
4 primary books8 released booksMindspace Investigations is a 8-book series with 4 primary works first released in 2012 with contributions by Alex Hughes and Alex Hughes.
Reviews with the most likes.
What's not to like about a story that has at it's center an ex-junky Telepath, who's working as an interrogator for the Atlanta Police, on a serial killer case that touches a past he'd rather not be reminded of.
This was an interesting read. I enjoyed the world created here.
I didn't like the MC at first, but he grew on me and I ended up really liking him and rooting for him.
He's a telepath working with the police to solve crimes. Especially ones that involve Mindspace. He can delve into criminal minds and get the answers the police can't.
At first I thought he was whiny. He whined about losing his career with The Guild because of addiction. But, when I read about his past and how he ended up that way, my opinion of him totally changed. I say he because we don't get his name until the end. I thought that was interesting.
I plan to continue the series.
This was a totally adequate book. This is a futuristic police procedural featuring a telepath who acts as an interrogator, a case of “You've got Urban Fantasy in my SF,” “No, you'vegot SF in my Urban Fantasy.”
The telepath in question is a recovering drug addict on his last second chance – and that was pretty well done. I work with a log of people in Recovery, and this rang true. But beyond that, he was sort of a stock PI-type down on his luck. The same goes for his tough, driven and beautiful Homicide detective partner, and the various superiors they have – even his sponsor. They're all characters we've seen dozens upon dozens of times before. To an extent, that's forgivable in a first novel in a series, you're building a world, setting up everything, you can skate by with mostly stock characters, as long as you flesh them out later. But there wasn't a single original character.
The plot wasn't much better once you strip away the Mindspace parts of the equation.
At the end of the day, for all it had going for it, Clean just wasn't all that well-written. Too often it read like something I'd write on my best day (and I'm fully aware of my limitations) – sure, it its moments, and the last 40 or so pages, really delivered. But that was more plot than execution, by that point, as long as she wasn't being incoherent, it would work – it was just getting to that point that was the struggle. It was the setup and curiosity that got me to that point.
It wouldn't surprise me a bit if one day I really liked Hughes' stuff, but today wasn't that day.